| Unilogic, Ltd., Scribe Document Production System User Manual, fourth edition, 1984. |
....document standards. A large number of nonuniform representations currently exist in the domain of electronic documents. There are different encoding schemes for specialized humanities document collections [4 7] corpora [8,9] and dictionaries [10] There are assorted text formatting languages [11 13]. To complicate matters, concordance building programs [14,15] permit the users to define their own restricted encoding scheme. Applications usually contain both the applicationdependent functions and the necessary library access functions (see Figure 2) In this scenario, if an application has to ....
....if the token classes are disjoint, there will be no ambiguity during the lexical analysis. Each token will belong to a unique token class. Ambiguity complicates the lexical analysis phase of accessing encoded documents. For example, a right parenthesis can be a text string or a tag in Scribe [13]. Hence, the LIF should satisfy the property of disjointness. 2.2.1 Abstract syntax of the LIF The construction of the abstract syntax of the LIF is driven by a partitioning of the token classes similar to that in Figure 3 for current encoding classes. The first partition of the token classes is ....
Unilogic, Ltd., Scribe Document Production System User Manual, fourth edition, 1984.
....program in Figure 2.2b contains a call to this function, and the result, as it appears in the formatted view, is given in Figure 2.2c. The idea of formatting a document with directives specifying logical structure rather than typesetting information was pioneered by Brian Reid s Scribe system [Unilogic85] Brooks contribution involves integrating this technique into a two view editor, and providing interactive support for inserting structural instances into the page view. Lilac 36 permits either of the two views to be edited, and changes made to one automatically propagate to the other. A vast ....
Unilogic, Ltd. SCRIBE Document Production System User Manual. Fourth Edition. Suite 240, Commerce Court, 4 Station Square, Pittsburgh, PA 15219. June 1985. 221
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