That is not a bad idea, and we tried it for awhile at textonline.org. But you also lose one important feature: semantic markup. Wikis use a display markup, so you can't preserve certain data as distinct, like lemma, Strong's number, and part of speech. Scripture references may be the exception because you could create them as a link, but that makes the markup more challenging for non-techies. And wikis are not brainless for non-techies.

Daniel

On 09/05/2011 04:37 AM, Benjamin Misja wrote:
Hi,

This might be a silly idea from a non-techie, but why not just use a Wiki?
Markup is simple, far more people will be familiar with it, it's platform-
independent and doesn't require any additional software to be installed. In
addition, your work would take place in a more public setting, thus motivating
more people to use it and join in, even with small fixes, and giving it more
notoriety.

I'm following this thread with interest.

God bless,
Ben

Am Sonntag, 4. September 2011, 21:48:44 schrieb Daniel Owens:
Snip...

On 09/04/2011 01:12 PM, David Troidl wrote:
Hi Aaron,

On 9/4/2011 10:50 AM, Aaron Christianson wrote:
Daniel,
This does sound very much like what I am interested in doing, but
unfortunately, you seem to be using WeSay, which appears to have some
deficiencies in it's Linux versions that will make it unusable for
editing a work of this kind (no support for non-latin scripts, and
issues copying and pasting non-ascii characters).  I'm afraid that I
use Linux exclusively, and my ability to contribute to this project
would be severely limited.
Yes, for a Linux-only or a Mac person, this is a significant problem. I
am a mainly-Linux person, and I am waiting eagerly for WeSay to be fully
functional in Linux (without holding my breath). The reason I chose
WeSay was to encourage non-techies with an easy-to-use application that
supports structured collaboration using a version control system. It
works great with unicode in Windows, handles multiple contributors
easily, and is developed by people trained and experienced in creating
lexica. One additional useful feature is that it offers the ability to
add semantic domain information. However, for our purposes WeSay is
basically limited to Windows at this point.

I was going to write to Daniel privately, but maybe this is a topic
that needs to be brought up here.  My concern is the proliferation of
formats, trying to accomplish the same thing.  With Daniel's LIFT
dictionary, the SWORD TEI-based lexicon format, whatever you would use
and my ad hoc schema, all with similar goals, there could be a lot of
duplication of effort.
Yes, I also don't like the idea of duplicating efforts.

I made my schema just to get into the work, and with the intention of
making it easy to transform to another format, when there was
something better.  I know that the TEI could handle all the
requirements, but it's huge and forbidding.  The SWORD format examples
I've seen appear dense and hard to understand.  I'm not certain if it
has all the capabilities my lexicon needs.  I was going to ask Daniel
if his LIFT dictionary could handle it all, and what would be required
to transform between the two.  Also if his setup could import
transformed entries.  Now if WeSay is a problem with Linux, is that
insurmountable?  Could the LIFT dictionary be used in another
context?  Or what other format would be better?
On formats: SWORD's implementation of TEI for a lexicon is probably not
the best format. At least I have not considered it to be a good format
for creating a lexicon. I chose LIFT XML because it is a format that
several SIL programs use (WeSay and FieldWorks). It is designed for
lexica, so I imagine it can handle anything we need. WeSay allows you to
create custom fields, which makes it easy to work with. LIFT is just an
XML standard, so there is nothing to prevent one from creating an
application to write to a LIFT XML file.

On applications: I have been ruminating on the problem of WeSay being
Windows-only and wondering if a browser-based solution written in PHP or
something like that would be a "quick" solution for Mac and Linux users.
The PHP code and LIFT file could reside on the contributor's machine
with Mercurial negotiating the differences with the server. That would
mean the PHP program would have to be written to work well with WeSay,
which could be a job in itself. I just don't have the time or expertise
to pull it off. But if someone could do that, it would open up
possibilities for contributors.

Our project is moving so slowly that I am open to changing the way we do
it. Data format questions aside, the following features are needed for
an interface for developing a Hebrew lexicon:

     * Support RtoL Unicode
     * Easy to use for non-techies (virtually brainless, if possible)
     * Changes stored using a version control system allowing for
       collaboration
     * Support features that are commonly accepted as good linguistic
       practice, such as semantic domains
     * Customizable for our needs

So far WeSay works the best for that, but it is limited to Windows. I am
open to new ideas.

Daniel


_______________________________________________
sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org
http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel
Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page
_______________________________________________
sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org
http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel
Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page


_______________________________________________
sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org
http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel
Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page

Reply via email to