att.editLike

att.editLike provides attributes describing the nature of a encoded scholarly intervention or interpretation of any kind. 1 The TEI Infrastructure
Moduletei — 1 The TEI Infrastructure
Members att.transcriptional [ add addSpan del delSpan restore subst] affiliation age am birth climate corr date death education event ex expan faith floruit gap langKnowledge langKnown location nationality occupation org orgName origDate origPlace origin persName person place placeName population reg relation residence sex socecStatus state supplied terrain time trait unclear
AttributesIn addition to global attributes
cert(certainty) signifies the degree of certainty associated with the intervention or interpretation.
Status Optional
Datatype
data.certainty
resp(responsible party) indicates the agency responsible for the intervention or interpretation, for example an editor or transcriber.
Status Optional
Datatype 1–∞ occurrences of
data.pointer
separated by whitespace
Values A pointer to an element in the document header that is associated with a person asserted as responsible for some aspect of the text's creation, transcription, editing, or encoding.
evidenceindicates the nature of the evidence supporting the reliability or accuracy of the intervention or interpretation.
Status Optional
Datatype
data.enumerated
Suggested values include:
internalthere is internal evidence to support the intervention.
externalthere is external evidence to support the intervention.
conjecturethe intervention or interpretation has been made by the editor, cataloguer, or scholar on the basis of their expertise.
sourcecontains a list of one or more pointers indicating the sources which support the given reading.
Status Mandatory when applicable
Datatype 1–∞ occurrences of
data.pointer
separated by whitespace
Values A space-delimited series of sigla; each sigil should correspond to a witness or witness group and occur as the value of the xml:id attribute on a witness or msDesc element elsewhere in the document.
Note
The members of this attribute class are typically used to represent any kind of editorial intervention in a text, for example a correction or interpretation, or to date or localize manuscripts etc.