Version 5 (modified by 16 years ago) (diff) | ,
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Character Issues
Characters to be typed directly
ASCII characters should be used with their normal values, except as indicated below. Note that tilde (by itself) should be entered directly as ~.
The following characters with diacritics are to be typed directly:
Characters with acute accent
áéíóú ÁÉÍÓÚ
Characters with grave accent
àèìòù ÀÈÌÒÙ
Characters with circumflex accent
âêîôû ÂÊÎÔÛ
Characters with umlaut/diaeresis
äëïöüÿ ÄËÏÖÜŸ
Characters with tilde
ãõñ ÃÕÑ
Characters with cedilla
ç Ç
Common ligatures
æ œ Æ Œ
Special conventions
Owing to the high frequency of “long s” <ʃ>, this character should be typed as $. (We do not expect to digitize works that contain both the currency symbol and the s variant.)
XML Entity notation
Characters that cannot be conveniently be typed may be indicated by means of XML entities. The entities specified in ISO 8879 (see especially isolat1 and isolat2) should be used. More generally, some characters may be entered using conventions specified below:
For characters with accents enumerated above, if the text input method does not support the composition of the accent with a certain character, entities may be used thus. For instance, the operating system typically makes no provision for allowing the entry of a modified <q> — yet such characters are frequent in Latin materials. They may be typed as (e.g.):
&qacute; &qgrave; &quml; &qtilde;
The ampersand (&) must be entered as the entity &, to avoid confusion with its use in entitites.