Talk:OSIS 211 CR

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Revision as of 20:59, 2 January 2015 by David Haslam (talk | contribs) (The element and poetry markup?: new section)

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Introduction

Chris, please add an introductory description to the top of this page. David Haslam 17:56, 12 December 2010 (UTC)

Done - based on Troy's post in the Google group for Open Scriptures. David Haslam 08:11, 4 August 2011 (MDT)

New Features

Troy outlined a couple new features to handle OSIS fragments: https://groups.google.com/d/msg/openscriptures/kygOM0yPHL8/3232AYNQsSIJ Including:

  • Shadow/virtual elements
  • Remotely referenceable header

David Troidl also had a list of suggestions: https://groups.google.com/d/topic/openscriptures/1lyqiBSUCh8/discussion

--Westonruter 00:23, 10 August 2011 (MDT)

Next SBL meeting?

The SBL meeting mentioned in the opening paragraph is now past. When is the next meeting/opportunity to review OSIS improvements? David Haslam 05:30, 20 October 2012 (MDT)

Corrections to the OSIS Reference Manual

Maybe we should include a separate section to address Corrections to the OSIS Reference Manual? David Haslam 05:37, 20 October 2012 (MDT)

Don't get mixed up

As the OSIS element is called divineName and the USFM equivalent is called Name of Deity, this observation is recorded to serve as a caution against getting abbreviations mixed up when referring to either in emails, etc. (cf. the USFM tag par is \nd_...\nd* ) David Haslam 07:39, 22 February 2014 (MST)

The <speaker> element and poetry markup?

The line group element <lg> does not allow the <speaker> element unless it's within a line element <l>.
I've recently come across OSIS lines generated by usfm2osis.py where the <speaker> element occurred directly within <lg>.

What's the recommended solution or hack? Is a change to OSIS required to facilitate this use? David Haslam 13:59, 2 January 2015 (MST)