On 4/15/2015 11:41 PM, Robert Blackstone wrote:
On 15 Apr 2015, at 19:51 , Alan BRASLAU
wrote Hans Hagen
wrote: On 4/14/2015 1:48 PM, Robert Blackstone wrote:
Dear all,
The book I am typesetting contains a very extensive and detailed index. The number of index items is probably around 1200, 16 pages. A fair number of them occur in more than one chapter. Like bibliography items, and for the sake of consistency, I have stored them in some auxiliary files and it is a matter of copy and paste to get them into the text in the proper place and way. (With always a risk of accidentally deleting or adding a spurious brace or bracket, with nasty results.)
I wonder therefore whether it would be possible to handle them like bibliography items, by means of a key, and leave their expansion to ConTeXt.
Would it be possible? And if it is not (yet) possible, how could I perhaps tackle it?
so you want to remap given index entries to new ones? at what moment?
We index pretty heavily now in the new bibliography dataset subsystem, that is one can create an index of authors, an index of keywords, an index of titles, etc. as well as index the pages on which a reference is cited. All of the information is there.
So say that you want to create a database of anything: words, images, phrases. You can put these into the database structure and then insert them or any associated information wherever you want in your text, later producing lists and indexes.
Can you give an example of what type of information you extensively index with detail?
Alan Hi Alan, I realize that I have not yet reacted to Hans’ reply. So let me do that first (it was written but not yet sent).
Hi Hans, Do I want to remap given index entries? Assuming I understand your reply correctly the answer is: Yes, in principle. I would want to be able to change them if there are errors, or if some publisher has different views about the presentation of titles of items that are in the index (titles of songs, for instance). And also when (parts of) the text has (have) to be reused for other purposes. Change them in one operation, that is, not by digging up all occurrences in the book of the item that has to be changed.
In answer to Alan’s question: names, theoretical treatises and manuscripts, musical works, musical terms. Nearly all examples in the book have several features that have to be indexed: composer’s name, title of the published work (an opera for instance), title of the particular aria of which the example shows a fragment, and the special features that are shown in the example, parallel 7ths, for example. The not-so-minimal example below (best processed iwth mkiv) gives an impression, also of the optical clumsiness that makes the unprocessed text practically unreadable. That is another reason why I would like to be able to call an index entry by means of some sort of key, like in bibliographic items for footnotes.
\startluacode document.indexentries = { ["rule"] = [[Rule(s)]], ["ruleimperfect"] = [[+ \quote{imperfect to perfect, from}]], ["galilei"] = [[Galilei, Vincenzo]], } function document.getindexentry(n) context("\\index[%s]{%s}",n,document.indexentries[n] or ("<" .. n .. ">")) end \stopluacode \unexpanded\def\InEn[#1]% {\ctxlua{document.getindexentry("#1")}} \starttext That this rule \InEn[rule] \InEn[ruleimperfect] was not applied by everybody is for example shown in {\em Fronimo}% \InEn[galilei] etc etc
Kind regards,
Robert Blackstone ==================================================================================== \starttext That this rule% \index[Rule]{Rule(s)}%% \index[RuleImperfect]{ + \quote{imperfect to perfect, from}} was not applied by everybody is for example shown in {\em Fronimo}% \index[Galilei]{Galilei, Vincenzo}% \index[GalileiFronimo]{ +{\em Fronimo}}% \index[Cadence]{cadence(s)}%% \index[CadenceP]{ + plagal}% \index[PlagalCad]{plagal cadence}% \index[Fronimo]{{\em Fronimo} (Galilei)} (1584), Vincenzo Galileo's treatise on lute playing and the intabulation% \index[Intabulation]{intabulation} of vocal music. \page Artusi\index[Artusi]{Artusi, Giovanni Maria} showed examples (Ex.~4.34) with parallel 4th% \index[Dissonance]{dissonance(s)}% \index[Dissonance4]{ + 4th(s)}% \index[Dissonance4Parall]{ + + parallel}s and 7th% \index[Dissonance]{dissonance(s)}% \index[Dissonance7]{ + 7th(s)}% \index[Dissonance7Paral]{ + + parallel}s in a contrapuntally oriented fashion. These parallels were to appear in works with basso continuo around 1610 but now between the bass and the solo part. They occur in vocal and instrumental music as well as in works for keyboard solo. Most examples have parallel 7th% \index[Dissonance]{dissonance(s)}% \index[Dissonance7]{ + 7th(s)}% \index[Dissonance7Paral]{ + + parallel}s but some examples of parallel 4th% \index[Dissonance]{dissonance(s)}% \index[Dissonance4]{ + 4th(s)}% \index[Dissonance4Parall]{ + + parallel}s and 2nd% \index[Dissonance]{dissonance(s)}% \index[Dissonance2Parall]{ + + parallel}s can be found as well.
\setupregister[index][indicator=yes] \completeindex[compress=yes] \stoptext ===========================================================================
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