From 3babb9c082bb636da3e48c781bab27c4c8af083d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jonas Smedegaard Date: Thu, 27 Mar 2025 08:10:12 +0100 Subject: small improvements to intro and headers --- _intro.qmd | 16 +++++++++++----- 1 file changed, 11 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) (limited to '_intro.qmd') diff --git a/_intro.qmd b/_intro.qmd index 582d9db..948136d 100644 --- a/_intro.qmd +++ b/_intro.qmd @@ -16,10 +16,10 @@ You can add authors, supervisors and publication date as a YAML structure at the top of the text. And you can produce a web page or a PDF document from your text, sensibly styled and laid out according to academic conventions. -You cannot, however, annotate a string according to content domain. +You cannot, however, annotate a string +contextually related an arbitrary content domain +(only navigationally for hypertext and quotationally for citations). -Quarto supports hypertext and citation annotations, -but not arbitrary domain-specific annotations. You can spell out in prose that one set of numbers is in meter and another in nautical miles, or that one citation is supportive and another a rebuttal, @@ -33,8 +33,14 @@ and as intuitive and unobtrusive writing aid. ## Problem formulation -The aim of this project is to extend Pandoc and Quarto -to support domain-specific annotations. +Quarto supports hypertext and citation annotations, +and document-wide metadata. +The aim of this project is to extend +Pandoc processing and Quarto authoring workflow +to support writing arbitrary domain-specific annotations +which are converted to metadata, +if possible preserving reference to location of the string. + This aim has been framed with the following problem statement: **How can Pandoc -- cgit v1.2.3