11-07-2011, 01:11 AM
Over at http://poetry-markup.blogspot.com/2011/1...t-116.html there is an explantion of the advanced Curl markup used for Sonnet 116 at http://poets.aule-browser.com/shkspr/sonnet-116.html.
A student version of the most famous sonnet of William Shakespeare has lexical annotation for some lines: the Curl {degrees} expression is placed in a {define-text-format} for a {lex-mrk} within a line.
Lines with annotation are provided with a {gap} format that permits the annotation to stay off at a distance near the right margin when in full-screen. Re-sizing the screen horizontal width reveals this behavior: the annotation slides in and then collapses.
The aim is minimalist markup: if you have an idea for achieving this behavior with a simpler text-format please do not hesitate to propose that code.
TIP: To obtain access to the browser F11 response to activate fullscreen mode for a Curl page, click on the visible browser bar then tap the F11 key (Linux Firefox). Once in browser fullscreen, a top click should restore the default browser features.
A student version of the most famous sonnet of William Shakespeare has lexical annotation for some lines: the Curl {degrees} expression is placed in a {define-text-format} for a {lex-mrk} within a line.
Lines with annotation are provided with a {gap} format that permits the annotation to stay off at a distance near the right margin when in full-screen. Re-sizing the screen horizontal width reveals this behavior: the annotation slides in and then collapses.
The aim is minimalist markup: if you have an idea for achieving this behavior with a simpler text-format please do not hesitate to propose that code.
TIP: To obtain access to the browser F11 response to activate fullscreen mode for a Curl page, click on the visible browser bar then tap the F11 key (Linux Firefox). Once in browser fullscreen, a top click should restore the default browser features.