Dear Harry, This is very cool, indeed. Thanks a lot!!! -----------------------------------------
*Emmanuel FRANCIS-GONZE* Chargé de recherche CNRS Centre d’études sud-asiatiques et himalayennes 2 Cours des Humanités 93322 AUBERVILLIERS bureau A222 ✆ 01 88 12 01 82 Online CV HAL <https://cv.archives-ouvertes.fr/emmanuel-francis> Le dim. 15 févr. 2026, 14:51, Tyler Neill via INDOLOGY < [email protected]> a écrit : > Dear Harry, > > This is very cool. The search facility is intuitive and works great, > taking you right to the correct spot in the text. Thank you for > creating this option for the community. Lots of people have needed this for > a long time. > > Small question: I am looking for Nyāyamañjarī from SARIT (I'm curious how > you manage the plain-text representation of more complex TEI cases), but I > cannot find it. Can you clarify the corpora scopes covered so far? An > overview table on the site somewhere could be helpful. > > Best wishes, > Tyler > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- >> From: Harry Spier <[email protected]> >> To: [email protected] >> Cc: >> Bcc: >> Date: Sun, 15 Feb 2026 00:37:43 -0500 >> Subject: [INDOLOGY] Fwd: Announcement: launch of Searchable Aggregate >> Library of Sanskrit Etexts >> Dear list members, >> I am extremely pleased to announce the launch of the "Searchable >> Aggregate Library of Sanskrit Etexts" newly created by myself from the >> major sanskrit etext collections on the web, whose licensing permits >> their copying for non-commercial use. >> >> Link: *searchable-sanskrit-library.org >> <http://searchable-sanskrit-library.org>* >> >> 1) It contains 1501 etexts giving a cross section of sanskrit texts from >> the vedic texts onward to pre-modern . The etexts are copied from the >> following collections. >> GRETIL sanskrit etext collection: 804 etexts >> SARIT sanskrit etexts in transliteration: 54 etexts >> University of Texas Dharma etexts and Upanishad etext collections: 86 >> etexts >> Digital Corpus of Sanskrit vedic prose collection (containing many TITUS >> texts): 58 etexts. >> Muktabodha etext collections with Creative Commons licencing (not >> including its joint venture etexts) : 499 etexts >> >> 2) There is a single clickable index to the entire collection in sanskrit >> letter order. >> >> 3) The search engine allows searchs in normal mode or with regular >> expressions. The results are displayed in what's known as "search in files" >> format, which shows all the results in a single page. Clicking on a result >> opens the relevant etext to that line in a new tab. >> >> If clicking on a line doesn't open the file up, then your browser malware >> protection may be the problem and you will have to add the url >> *searchable-sanskrit-library.org >> <http://searchable-sanskrit-library.org>* as a safe site. >> >> 4) Care has been taken to give credit to the institutions and >> transcribers. All files have their original headers and the clickable >> index to the etexts lists in addition to the titles, the institution and >> the transcribers names that created the etext. >> >> It is hoped that this new etext library will be both a location to >> search for etexts but also given that the collection is a cross-section of >> the literature from the earliest times onwards and regular expression >> searchs can be done, it is hoped that it will also be a research tool. >> >> This is a private initiative unaffiliated with any organisation. >> >> Thank you, >> Harry Spier >> > > _______________________________________________ > INDOLOGY mailing list > [email protected] > https://list.indology.info/mailman/listinfo/indology >
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