[XeTeX] index' proofmode and ledmac (OT)
John Was
john.was at ntlworld.com
Sun Jul 5 17:39:01 CEST 2009
I haven't been following this thread, but if you are reporting a manuscript
which regularly has extended passages which for some reason you don't want
to be seen as part of the main text, one option which sometimes works is to
put these extended sequences in the text after all, but in smaller type,
possibly surrounded by double square brackets [[ ]] (these should be a
single character, not the two brackets I have typed here). The textual note
would just be e.g.:
Haec . . . fuerunt _only in B_
(Or if this is a frequent occurrence, just state in the preamble to the
edition that small-type passages are found only in MS B.) TeX copes well
with the oscillation between say 10/12pt and 9/11pt text and readers
interested only in the 'main' text can simply skip over small-type
sequences.
I don't know if this would work in your case, but certainly all options
should be tried before deciding that you have no choice but to inflict
page-long footnotes on the long-suffering reader! That is not making the
information easiliy available but rather _awkwardly_ available. I've often
typeset books with giant footnotes leaving just one or two lines of main
text (a disease that afflicts philosophers in particular), but it's not a
pretty sight and the reader's patience must often be sorely tried. In the
case of app. crit. I think an editor can give hrself the amount of laxity
that is appropriate to the job in hand - if you have formulated a principle
of presenting the textual evidence and you find that that leads to visually
awkward results, then you have the option of coming up with a different
principle that works for the particular text that you are editing. (Hope
this doesn't sound too much like Groucho Marx...)
If giant notes are absolutely unavoidable it may be necessary to abandon the
convenience (which lies at the heart of TeX) of throwing all the information
at the program and leaving it to get on with pagination. You would then
have to decide where the page-break would work, force the pagination at that
point (\eject), and give the second part of the rogue footnote manually as a
separate footnote on the next page: for this you would need to invent a new
category of uncued footnote that doesn't advance numbered (or lettered) cues
but just appears at the start of the footnote area on the page, just like a
run-over note in any ordinary text. I've been forced to do that with
facing-page editions where I have to distribute the annotation manually
between the left-hand text and right-hand translation pages, but it's a slow
and tedious operation (try it with a thousand pages of medieval theology - I
have!), and if you alter anything earlier in the text it could completely
mess up your manual page-breaks. So very much a last resort, I would say.
I don't suppose any of this helps! But it might lead to some ideas that
could work in the particular text you are wrestling with.
John
----- Original Message -----
From: "Florian Grammel" <grammel at gmx.net>
To: "Unicode-based TeX for Mac OS X and other platforms" <xetex at tug.org>
Sent: Sunday, July 05, 2009 2:17 PM
Subject: Re: [XeTeX] index' proofmode and ledmac (OT)
>>> Some of the footnotes in the critical apparatus are very long, a few
>>> even filling more than one page. If I understand ledmac's manual
>>> correctly (do I?) paragraphed footnotes can never be broken across two
>>> pages.
>>
>> Not a technical solution but as a user of critical editions I don't like
>> very long footnotes interrupting the reading of the text. Why not put
>> your
>> long footnote / essay at the end of your edition in a 'Supplementary
>> notes'
>> section with cross-references to the text.
>>
>
> I'm afarid we are talking about two completely different concepts:
> The sort of footnotes I'm referring to, is the critical apparatus
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_apparatus
> of a scholarly text-edition, where the editor has little influence on how
> long the notes are getting. Endnotes/appendices are only an option in
> very few cases, as it is one main point to make all the relevant textual
> information easily available.
>
> Best regards
> Florian.
>
>
>
>
> ____________________________________________
>
> Florian Grammel
>
> Gentofte, Denmark
>
>
>
>
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