Looks great! If you wanted a simpler title I would just leave it at "A TEI
customization for writing TEI customizations". To get to <= 300 words you
could maybe start by cutting a few examples of schemata and customizations,
especially the longer ones.
Did I remember reading there's likely going to be a deadline extension?
Raff
On Sun, May 14, 2017 at 9:36 PM, Elisa Beshero-Bondar
Hi Syd-- It's hard to think of a better title than the one you've given it, unless you call it (as you have in the past) "ODD for ODDs" before the colon instead of "tei_customization".
Meanwhile I'm cobbling together an abstract on teaching with TEI, building on the talk I gave at the public day in Prague--in which I propose that a great way to teach TEI is in the context of repurposing an "old" document.
Elisa
On Sun, May 14, 2017 at 5:41 PM, Syd Bauman
wrote: Dear Council,
Here is a 1st crack at my submission for the TEI conference, due tomorrow. I've listed all fields, but am only asking y'all to review and edit the abstract (which has to be <= 300 words -- it currently has 329), and to suggest a better title if one jumps to mind.
##################################
Title ----- tei_customization: A TEI customization for writing TEI customizations
Abstract -------- The TEI ODD language (and the more modern version thereof, Pure ODD) can be used for two related, but distinctly different purposes: 1) to *create* a markup language, including documentation and schemas; and 2) to *customize* a markup language that was already written in ODD. There are several examples of (1), including the TEI Guidelines, the Music Encoding Initiative, the ISO Feature Structure encoding system, the W3C Internationalization Tag Set, and a version of the Itsy Bitsy Teeny Weeny Simple Hypertext DTD. And there are several well known examples of (2), including TEI Lite, TEI Tite, TEI Simple Print, CBML, DALF, DHQ, jTEI, and the TEI in Libraries Best Practice Guidelines. But the TEI Guidelines are not meant to be used out of the box -- *every* TEI project is expected to customize the TEI, thus they are all expected to create a customization in ODD. The 'tei_odds' customization provided by the TEI is, understandably, a schema intended to check conformance with the rules for using ODD. Because ODD is used for two different things, and for both TEI and non-TEI languages, those rules are necessarily much more broad than those for writing TEI customizations. E.g., the value of the @key attribute of <moduleRef> can be any XML name. But when used to write a TEI customization, the only valid values are the actual names of TEI modules (e.g., "core", "textstructure", "header", "namesdates"). The tei_customization customization is not intended to produce a schema that can tell you what is "correct" or "incorrect", but rather to *help* you write a TEI customization. So, e.g., only the names of TEI modules are allowed as values of moduleRef/@key, and thus your editor can give you a pop-up box of those values. This paper will describe (and the talk will demonstrate use of) tei_customization, and discuss the interesting twist that this is not a schema whose rules must be obeyed, but rather an editing assistant.
Keywords -------- TEI, Customization, ODD
Bibliography ------------ 2016-08: “The Hard Edges of Soft Hyphens.” Presented at Balisage: The Markup Conference 2016, Washington, DC, August 2–5, 2016. In Proceedings of Balisage: The Markup Conference 2016. Balisage Series on Markup Technologies, vol. 17 (2016). DOI: 10.4242/BalisageVol17.Bauman01.
2013-10: “TAPAS and the TEI: An Update and Open Discussion” with Julia Flanders and Elena Pierazzo. Presented at The Linked TEI: Text Encoding in the Web: the TEI Conference, 2013, Rome, Italy, October 2–5, 2013
2013-06: “Encoding Historical Financial Records” with Kathryn Tomasek. Presented at Digital Humanities 2013, Lincoln, NE, July 17, 2013.
2012-11: “Encoding Financial Records for Historical Research” with Kathryn Tomasek. Presented at TEI and the C{rl}O{wu}D: the Text Encoding Initiative Conference, 2012, College Station, TX, November 8–10, 2012. In _Journal of the Text Encoding Initiative_, Issue 6 | December 2013. URL: http://jtei.revues.org/895; DOI: 10.4000/jtei.895
2011-08: “Interchange vs. Interoperability.” Presented at Balisage: The Markup Conference 2011, Montréal, Canada, August 2–5, 2011. In Proceedings of Balisage: The Markup Conference 2011. Balisage Series on Markup Technologies, vol. 7 (2011). doi:10.4242/BalisageVol7.Bauman01.
Remark / Message to the Program Committee and Chairs ------ - ------- -- --- ------- --------- --- ------ Although I am indeed affiliated with Northeastern University (and that institution must be listed), I am also affiliated with the TEI Council, who charged me with writing this paper. -- tei-council mailing list tei-council@lists.tei-c.org http://lists.lists.tei-c.org/mailman/listinfo/tei-council
PLEASE NOTE: postings to this list are publicly archived
-- Elisa Beshero-Bondar, PhD Director, Center for the Digital Text | Associate Professor of English University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg | Humanities Division 150 Finoli Drive Greensburg, PA 15601 USA E-mail: ebb8@pitt.edu
Development site: http://newtfire.org -- tei-council mailing list tei-council@lists.tei-c.org http://lists.lists.tei-c.org/mailman/listinfo/tei-council PLEASE NOTE: postings to this list are publicly archived