One of the subtleties of OSIS is that the canonical attribute is actually not a
theological matter.
It’s easy to jump to the wrong conclusion that SWORD treats it as if it was.
It’s actually a technical attribute relating to the published work it
represents in digital format.
So it can just as well appear in a Commentary module as a Bible module.
Anything with canonical=“false” should in theory at least be only because the
marked text was not in the original work.
Then the question becomes “What was the original work?”
I will leave you to ponder....
David
Sent from ProtonMail Mobile
On Fri, May 8, 2020 at 15:09, Karl Kleinpaste <k...@kleinpaste.org> wrote:
> On 5/8/20 10:00 AM, Tom Sullivan wrote:
>> because Psalm titles are canonical, front-ends should put a difference
>> in display between them and human editor supplied titles.
>
> It's a fine idea, but it requires (in the xhtml case) the engine to wrap
> such titles in a suitable <span></span> so that a CSS control can put it
> to use, with appropriate new default render header content for it.
>
> _______________________________________________
> sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org
> http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel
> Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page
_______________________________________________
sword-devel mailing list: sword-devel@crosswire.org
http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel
Instructions to unsubscribe/change your settings at above page