Citable Text Services
- What is CTS?
- What is CITE?
- What is DTS?
- What are CapiTainS, Nemo, Nautilus, the HookTest?
- How do you make your text CTS compliant and why would you?
This manual answers these questions. It tells you what you need to know about the CTS standards, best practices, and guidelines in order to create CTS compliant text editions and share them on a CTS compliant publishing platform.
For more details, see the CTS protocol specification, the CapiTainS Guidelines, as well as the scholarly literature, for example:
Blackwell, Christopher W. and Smith, Neel. "The CITE architecture (CTS/CITE) for analysis and alignment" it - Information Technology, vol. 62, no. 2, 2020, pp. 91-98. https://doi.org/10.1515/itit-2019-0044
This manual is a complement to the TEI and BPT Guidelines.
- Summary
- CTS URNs for primary sources
- CTS URNs for secondary
- Guidelines
- CITE Explained
- CTS Explained
- CapiTainS Explained
- DTS Explained
- CTS Compliance
- Citability explained
- FRBR Explained
- OHCO Explained
- Registered CTS Namespaces
- Ontologies and fragmentary texts
- CTS URNs for fragmentary texts
- See also
Version | Date | Author | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0.1 | January 2019 | Ernest Suyver | First draft |
0.2 | February 2019 | Ernest Suyver | Changes and additions |
0.3 | April 2020 | Ernest Suyver | Rewrite |
0.4 | April 2023 | Ernest Suyver | Migration and republication |