<note>

<note> contiene una nota o un'annotazione 3.8.1 Notes and Simple Annotation 2.2.6 The Notes Statement 3.11.2.6 Notes and Other Additional Information 9.3.5.4 Notes within Entries
Modulocore — 3 Elements Available in All TEI Documents
Attributi att.placement (@place)
typedescrive il tipo di nota
Stato Opzionale
Tipo di dati
data.enumerated
Valori Values can be taken from any convenient typology of annotation suitable to the work in hand; e.g. annotation, gloss, citation, digression, preliminary, temporary
resp (responsabile) indica chi è responsabile dell'annotazione: autore, curatore, traduttore, ecc.
Stato Richiesto se applicabile
Tipo di dati
data.pointer
Valori a pointer to one of the identifiers declared in the document header, associated with a person asserted as responsible for some aspect of the text's creation, transcription, editing, encoding, or annotation
Nota
For specialized types of editorial annotation (e.g. for marking corrections, normalizations, cruxes, etc.), see chapter 12 Critical Apparatus.
anchoredindica se il testo copia mostra l'esatta posizione di riferimento della nota.
Stato Opzionale
Tipo di dati
data.truthValue
Nota
In modern texts, notes are usually anchored by means of explicit footnote or endnote symbols. An explicit indication of the phrase or line annotated may however be used instead (e.g. ‘page 218, lines 3–4’). The anchored attribute indicates whether any explicit location is given, whether by symbol or by prose cross-reference. The value true indicates that such an explicit location is indicated in the copy text; the value false indicates that the copy text does not indicate a specific place of attachment for the note. If the specific symbols used in the copy text at the location the note is anchored are to be recorded, use the n attribute.
targetindica il punto (o punti) di attacco per una nota, o l'inizio della porzione di testo a cui la nota è allegata
Stato Richiesto se applicabile
Tipo di dati 1–∞ occurrences of
data.pointer
separato da spazio bianco
Valori reference to the xml:ids of element(s) which begin at the location in question (e.g. the xml:id of an <anchor> element).
Nota
If target and targetEnd are to be used to indicate where notes attach to the text, then elements at the appropriate locations (<anchor> elements if necessary) must be given xml:id values to be pointed at.
targetEndrimanda alla fine della porzione di testo a cui la nota è allegata nel caso in cui la nota non sia inclusa nel testo in quel punto.
Stato Richiesto se applicabile
Tipo di dati 1–∞ occurrences of
data.pointer
separato da spazio bianco
Valori reference to the xml:id(s) of element(s) which end at the location(s) in question, or to an empty element at the point in question.
Usato daaltIdentifier model.noteLike
Può contenere
Dichiarazione
element note
{
   att.global.attributes,
   att.placement.attributes,
   attribute type { data.enumerated }?,
   attribute resp { data.pointer }?,
   attribute anchored { data.truthValue }?,
   attribute target { list { data.pointer+ } }?,
   attribute targetEnd { list { data.pointer+ } }?,
   macro.specialPara
}
Esempio
And yet it is not only in the great line of Italian
renaissance art, but even in the painterly
<note type="gloss">
 <term xml:lang="de">Malerisch</term>.
This word has, in the German, two distinct meanings, one objective, a
quality residing in the object, the other subjective, a mode of
apprehension and creation. To avoid confusion, they have been
distinguished in English as <mentioned>picturesque</mentioned> and
<mentioned>painterly</mentioned> respectively. (Tr.)
</note>
style of the Dutch genre painters of the seventeenth century that
drapery has this psychological significance.
Nota
The global n attribute may be used to supply the symbol or number used to mark the note's point of attachment in the source text, as in the following example:
Mevorakh b. Saadya's mother, the matriarch of the family
during the second half of the eleventh century,
<note n="126anchored="true"> The alleged mention of Judah Nagid's mother in a letter from
1071 is, in fact, a reference to Judah's children; cf. above,
nn. 111 and 54.
</note>
is well known from Geniza documents published by Jacob Mann.
However, if notes are numbered in sequence and their numbering can be reconstructed automatically by processing software, it may well be considered unnecessary to record the note numbers.