Harvard-Kyoto

Dominik Wujastyk ucgadkw at ucl.ac.uk
Mon Jul 1 11:42:50 UTC 1996


I would like to note that no one system of 7-bit transliteration is better
than another, as long as they are all unambigouous and clearly documented.
There is no need to be partisan in this matter, or even to suggest that
someone else should use your chosen system.  Simple search-and-replace
operations, especially with such tools as the Unix SED, make converting
between systems a matter of a few seconds.

For 8-bit coding, the situation is different, since the question of
correct screen and printer representation arises, and this requires the
investment of considerable time and effort in creating such utilities.
Clearly, a standard in this area is valuable.  The standards created at
the Vienna World Sanskrit conference, CS and CSX, are as good as any, and
reasonably widely adopted and supported.

Finally, in any system that uses particular characters in two meanings,
the only way to avoid ambiguity altogether is to mark strings according to
language.

Thus: "This verb is i.t." is ambiguous, and cannot be cleanly converted to
Devanagari for example.  If such operations are envisaged for this data,
it must be tagged by language (or script).  E.g., if <eng> and </eng> are
the tags marking the start and end of English, and <skt> is Sanskrit, we
get:  "<eng>This verb is</eng> <skt>i.t</eng>."

Note here that the space between the end of English and the start of
Sanskrit is indeterminate.  Such issues need clarification in any
rigorous tagging system.

--
Dominik Wujastyk
Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine
183 Euston Road, London NW1 2BE, England.
FAX +44-171-611-8545
email: d.wujastyk at ucl.ac.uk
WWW: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/~ucgadkw/wujastyk.html







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