Luigi,
Thank you for the link.
Unfortunately this site mentions some typesetting work for research on Stoicism (and other stuff) and on uploading the manuscripts of the English philosopher John Locke, but apparently some links are dead and the maintenance of the site seems to have stopped since ... 2011 . But maybe Hans knows these people?
see here : https://www.tatzetwerk.nl/projects.php?lang=en#h3
These fellows seem to work for
Brepols and Oxford >University Press asswell as Utrecht
University.
Read this curious assertion (curious because the text mention an invisible project) :
"Stoa ProjectTAT Zetwerk’s role in this project is managing the FileMaker database that contains Stoic text fragments (mainly in ancient Greek) accompanied by text critical and historic-philosophical notes, an English translation, and meta data. As soon as the text parts in the database have reached their final form, we convert them into a TeX-format, so that we can generate a mirrored critical edition. We can then create indices and concordances by using the meta data from the database. Currently, the Stoa Project does not have its own website."
If I understand, TAT Zetwerk manage Apple FileMaker database of pieces of Stoicorum Fragmenta texts (von Arnim edition) in order to convert them in TeX form (with critical apparatus...). But they give no sample.
On Fri, Jan 7, 2022 at 6:25 PM hanneder--- via ntg-context <ntg-context@ntg.nl> wrote:
Probably the situation in South Asian Studies (Indology) is peculiar.
As I indicated, there are mostly no budgets for book typesetting in
Indology and
I know of no real expert for typesetting in this field. In other
words, the authors
have do it themselves, usually in Word etc., but some do use TeX etc.
Our publications
series (Indologica Marpurgensia) is, for instance, all done with
LaTeX, as are my publications
with Harrassowitz, which is the largest publisher in our field in
Germany. There is no institution
offering typesetting of Sanskrit editions, because there is no
commercial interest in it and I
think there is no expertise for this (especially when Indian scripts
are used instead of transliteration).
Journals are different. Indological journals published by Brill use
TeX internally, which is convenient,
but most others know only Word (->InDesign). That is the situation,
frustrating in a way, but it also
gives some freedom for using TeX (and, sadly, creating one's own
dilettantic designs).
Jürgen
perhaps this can be interesting(seen them at a context meeting years ago)--
luigi
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