- TEI definition: gap ; EpiDoc-specific
customization: gap
A gap (gap) indicates a point at which material has been omitted in a transcription, whether for editorial reasons described in the TEI header, as part of sampling practice, or because the material is illegible, invisible, or inaudible.
Where characters have been lost on the original support and there is nothing to indicate to the editor how these should be restored, this is marked up as a lacuna using gap. Note that this is usually an empty element, as it marks a point at which the lacuna occurs, and therefore does not contain any content.
For a straightforward lacuna whose extent is known, gap should take the following three attributes:
- reason explains why the text has been restored, and for a lacuna is usually given the value "lost" (although other values are possible).
- quantity indicates how many characters or lines have been lost (where known).
- unit indicates what kind of textual unit has been lost, such as "character" or "line" (or indeed some other type of textual unit such as "column", "page" etc.).
‘[...]’Silvio Panciera 8.3<gap reason="lost" quantity="3" unit="character"/>Transformation using the example EpiDoc P5 stylesheets:
- DDbDP style: [ ̣ ̣ ̣]
- Default style (Panciera) style: [...]
‘[ ̣ ̣ ̣ ̣ ̣ ̣]’Josh Sosin <gap reason="lost" quantity="6" unit="character"/>Transformation using the example EpiDoc P5 stylesheets:
- DDbDP style: [ ̣ ̣ ̣ ̣ ̣ ̣]
- Default style (Panciera) style: [c. 6]
‘[ -ca. 9- ]’Josh Sosin <gap reason="lost" quantity="9" unit="character"/>Transformation using the example EpiDoc P5 stylesheets:
- DDbDP style: [- ca.9 -]
- Default style (Panciera) style: [c. 9]
<gap reason="lost" quantity="5" unit="character"/>Transformation using the example EpiDoc P5 stylesheets:
IRT: 126 <gap reason="lost" quantity="13" unit="character"/>Transformation using the example EpiDoc P5 stylesheets:
DDbDP: bgu.1.109 Responsibility for this section
Charlotte TupmanGabriel Bodard, Author