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        <title type="main">TEI by Example</title>
        <title type="sub">Module 3: Prose</title>
        <author xml:id="RvdB">Ron Van den Branden</author>
        <editor xml:id="EV">Edward Vanhoutte</editor>
        <editor xml:id="MT">Melissa Terras</editor>
        <sponsor>Association for Literary and Linguistic Computing (ALLC)</sponsor>
        <sponsor>Centre for Data, Culture and Society, University of Edinburgh, UK</sponsor> 
        <sponsor>Centre for Digital Humanities (CDH), University College London, UK</sponsor>
        <sponsor>Centre for Computing in the Humanities (CCH), King’s College London, UK</sponsor>
        <sponsor>Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies (CTB) , Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature, Belgium</sponsor>
        <funder>
          <address>
            <addrLine>Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies (CTB)</addrLine>
            <addrLine>Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature</addrLine>
            <addrLine>Koningstraat 18</addrLine>
            <addrLine>9000 Gent</addrLine>
            <addrLine>Belgium</addrLine>
          </address>
          <email>ctb@kantl.be</email>
        </funder>
        <principal>Edward Vanhoutte</principal>
        <principal>Melissa Terras</principal>
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      <publicationStmt>
        <publisher>Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies (CTB) , Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature, Belgium</publisher>
        <distributor>Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies (CTB) , Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature, Belgium</distributor>
        <pubPlace>Gent</pubPlace>
        <address>
          <addrLine>Centre for Scholarly Editing and Document Studies (CTB)</addrLine>
          <addrLine>Royal Academy of Dutch Language and Literature</addrLine>
          <addrLine>Koningstraat 18</addrLine>
          <addrLine>9000 Gent</addrLine>
          <addrLine>Belgium</addrLine>
        </address>
        <availability status="free">
          <p>Licensed under a <ref target="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/">Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License</ref>
                    </p>
        </availability>
        <date when="2010-07-09">9 July 2010</date>
      </publicationStmt>
      <seriesStmt>
        <title>TEI by Example.</title>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Edward Vanhoutte</name>
          <resp>editor</resp>
        </respStmt>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Ron Van den Branden</name>
          <resp>editor</resp>
        </respStmt>
        <respStmt>
          <name>Melissa Terras</name>
          <resp>editor</resp>
        </respStmt>
      </seriesStmt>
      <sourceDesc>
        <p>Digitally born</p>
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        <p>TEI by Example offers a series of freely available online tutorials walking individuals through the different stages in marking up a document in TEI (Text Encoding Initiative). Besides a general introduction to text encoding, step-by-step tutorial modules provide example-based introductions to eight different aspects of electronic text markup for the humanities. Each tutorial module is accompanied with a dedicated examples section, illustrating actual TEI encoding practise with real-life examples. The theory of the tutorial modules can be tested in interactive tests and exercises.</p>
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        <language ident="en-GB">en-GB</language>
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    <revisionDesc>
      <change when="2020-06-28" who="#RvdB">integrated examples in a single file</change>
    </revisionDesc>
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            <div xml:id="morganClarence" type="example">
        <head>Eric Lease Morgan: <title level="m">Clarence meets Alcuin</title>
                </head>
        <p>The following example is a fragment of the essay <title level="m">Clarence meets Alcuin</title> by Eric Lease Morgan, dealing with the application of <soCalled>expert systems</soCalled> on librarianship. This example features the concluding section to the prose essay. Notice how the author has used numbered divs to reflect the document structure, each with its own heading in a <gi>head</gi> element. Both subsections (properly encoded inside nesting <gi>div2</gi> elements) contain lists. The notes are listed in a numbered list, indicated by the <val>ordered</val> value for its <att>type</att> attribute, while the numbering has been retained as actual contents of the list items. The bibliographical list is encoded as a bulleted list, for which the actual rendering of the bullets is probably left to the application processing the text.</p>
        <figure xml:id="morgan-example">
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            <div1>
              <div2>
                <head>Notes </head>
                <list rend="ordered">
                  <item>1. This essay can also be found at
                    http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/staff/morgan/clarence-meets-alcuin.html, and you can
                    see the very beginnings of Ask Alcuin at
                    http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/staff/morgan/alcuin/. </item>
                  <item>2. Alex Goodall, The guide to expert systems (Oxford: Learned
                    Information, 1985), 11. </item>
                  <item>3. Donald A. Waterman, A guide to expert systems (Reading, MA:
                    Addison-Wesley, 1985), 11. </item>
                  <item>4. Ralph Alberico and Mary Micco, Expert systems for reference and
                    information retrieval (Westport, CT: Meckler, 1990) 86. </item>
                </list>
              </div2>
              <div2>
                <head>Suggested Readings </head>
                <list rend="bulleted">
                  <item>John V. Richardson, Knowledge-based systems for general reference work:
                    applications, problems, and progress (San Diego: Academic Press, 1995). This
                    relatively new book is the most scholarly of the of readings listed here. It
                    outlines definitions of reference work as well as knowlege-based (expert)
                    systems. It then suggests ways to incorporate the two disciplines into a
                    cohesive whole. Included are many references. If you are going to only read
                    one of the suggested readings, then this is the one to choose. </item>
                  <item>Rao Aluri and Donald E. Riggs, eds., Expert systems in libraries
                    (Norwood, NJ: Ablex Publsihing, 1990). This collection of essays describe
                    numerous expert systems for reference work. Contains many references and a
                    large selected bibliography. </item>
                  <item>Ralph Alberico and Mary Micco, Expert systems for reference and
                    information retrieval (Westport, CT: Meckler, 1990). This book
                    "attempts to address the development of expert systems for
                    reference and information retrieval." It contains recommended
                    readings and a large bibliography. </item>
                  <item>Christine Roysdon and Howard D. White, eds., Expert systems in reference
                    services (New York: Haworth Press, 1989). Another collection of essays
                    describing expert systems, but unfortunately some of the examples are not
                    really "expert systems." This is a good book for
                    understanding the principles of expert systems and methods for constructing
                    them. </item>
                </list>
              </div2>
            </div1>
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          <head type="legend">Adapted from a TEI P4 XML encoding of Eric Lease Morgan’s essay <title level="m">Clarence meets Alcuin</title> (<ref type="bibl" target="#morgan1997">Morgan 1997</ref>. TEI XML source file is not publicly available.</head>
        </figure>
      </div>
        </body>
    <back>
      <div type="bibliography">
        <listBibl>
          <bibl xml:id="bronte1847">
                        <author>Bronte, Emily</author>. <date>1847</date>. <title level="m">Wuthering Heights</title>. <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>: <publisher>Thomas Cautley Newby, publisher</publisher>. Encoded and made available by the University of Virginia Library, Text Collection at <ptr target="http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/BroWuth.html"/>.</bibl>
          <bibl xml:id="cather1919">
                        <author>Cather, Willa</author>. <date>1919</date>. <title level="a">Roll Call on the Prairies</title>. <title level="j">The Red Cross Magazine</title>, <biblScope unit="issue">14</biblScope> (<date>July 1919</date>). <biblScope unit="page">27–31</biblScope>. Edited by <editor>Andrew Jewell</editor>. <pubPlace>Lincoln</pubPlace>: <publisher>Center for Digital Research in the Humanities, University of Nebraska-Lincoln</publisher>. Available online at         <ptr target="http://cather.unl.edu/nf007.html"/>.</bibl>
          <bibl xml:id="jones2006">
                        <author>Jones, Malcolm</author>. <date>2006</date>. <title level="a">Print of the month, September 2006</title>. <title level="s">British Printed Images to 1700</title>. <pubPlace>London</pubPlace>: <publisher>Centre for Computing in the Humanities, King’s College</publisher>. Available online at <ptr target="https://web.archive.org/web/20160604002829/http://www.bpi1700.org.uk/research/printOfTheMonth/september2006.html"/>.</bibl>
          <bibl xml:id="morgan1997">
                        <author>Morgan, Eric Lease</author>. <date>1997</date>). <title level="a">Clarence meets Alcuin; or, expert systems are still an option in reference work.</title> In: <title level="m">The Cybrarian’s manual</title>. Edited by <editor>P. Ensor</editor>. <pubPlace>Chicago</pubPlace>: <publisher>American Library Association</publisher>. <biblScope unit="page">127–134</biblScope>. Available online at <ptr target="http://infomotions.com/musings/clarence-meets-alcuin/"/>.</bibl>
          <bibl xml:id="muller">
                        <author>Muller, Charles</author>. <date>s.d.</date> <title level="u">XML Technical Notes on the Yogācāra Bibliography</title>. Accompanying documentation for the Yogācāra Buddhism Research Association. Available online at <ptr target="http://www.acmuller.net/yogacara/bibliography/bibnotes.html"/>.</bibl>
        </listBibl>
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