Dear Andrew,
Is this really a punctuation character? What's its function? I think it doesn't fulfil the same function as a danda, it's a simple line filler and thus has a simple decorative function, so to say. We discussed about it at length during the project and we decided to tag it with <g> for several reasons. If you are interested, I can explain it in more detail.
Best wishes,
Camillo
Sent from my Xperia by Sony smartphone
---- Andrew Ollett wrote ----
Dear Dominik,
I have been transcribing what I take to be the same sign with a daṇḍa. It only seems to be used when the scribe has a bit of space to fill at the end of the line (or before the string hole).
[image.png]
It's visually indistinguishable from a daṇḍa, at least in this manuscript, so I haven't worried about distinguishing the two functions. But if you are transcribing the daṇḍa as <pc/> in TEI, as some people do, then you can certainly add distinguishing information, e.g. <pc type="danda" subtype="hyphen"/> or (probably better) <pc type="danda" force="weak"> (indicating that it is not a word-separator according to the TEIhttps://www.tei-c.org/release/doc/tei-p5-doc/en/html/ref-pc.html). Does anyone else do this?
Andrew
On Tue, Nov 12, 2019 at 12:43 PM Dominik Wujastyk