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Bookloupe documentation
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bookloupe: lists possible common formatting errors in a Project
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Gutenberg candidate file. Bookloupe is based on gutcheck, written
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by Jim Tinsley. It is a command line program and can be used under
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Microsoft Windows, Mac or Unix. For Windows-only people, there is
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an appendix at the end with brief instructions for running it.
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Current version: 1.94, a beta version leading up to version 2.0
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This software is Copyright Jim Tinsley 2000-2005 and
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J. Ali Harlow 2012 onwards.
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Bookloupe comes wih ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. For details, read the file COPYING.
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This is Free Software; you may redistribute it under certain conditions (GPL).
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See http://www.juiblex.co.uk/pgdp/bookloupe/ for the latest version.
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Usage is: bookloupe [-setopxlywm] filename
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where:
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-s checks Single quotes
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-e switches off Echoing of lines
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-t checks Typos
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-o produces an Overview only
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-p sets strict quotes checking for Paragraphs
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-x (paranoid) switches OFF typo checking and extra checks
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-l turns off Line-end checks
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-y sets error messages to stdout
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-w is a special mode for web uploads (for future use)
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-v (verbose) forces individual reporting of minor problems
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-m interprets Markup of some common HTML tags and entities
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-u warns about words in a user-defined typo file gutcheck.typ
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-d ignores some DP-specific markup
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Running bookloupe without any parameters will display a brief help message.
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Sample usage:
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bookloupe warpeace.txt
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More detail:
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Character encoding
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Bookloupe will handle e-texts encoded in UTF-8 (preferred),
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ISO-8859-1 (also known as Latin-1), or WINDOWS-1252 (also known,
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incorrectly, as ansi). The output will be in the same encoding
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as the input e-text.
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Echoing lines (-e to switch off)
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You may find it convenient, when reviewing Bookloupe's
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suggestions, to see the line that Bookloupe is questioning.
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That way, you can often see at a glance whether it is
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a real error that needs to be fixed, or a false positive
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that should be in the text, but Bookloupe's limited
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programming doesn't understand.
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By default, bookloupe echoes these lines, but if you don't
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want to see the lines referred to, -e will switch it OFF.
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Quotes (-s and -p switches)
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Bookloupe always looks for unbalanced doublequotes in a
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paragraph. It is a common convention for writers not to
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close quotes in a paragraph if the next paragraph opens
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with quotes and is a continuation by the same speaker.
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Bookloupe therefore does not normally report unclosed quotes
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if the next paragraph begins with a quote. If you need
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to see all unclosed quotes, even where the next paragraph
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begins with a quote, you should use the -p switch.
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Singlequotes (') are a problem, since the same character
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is used for an apostrophe. I'm not sure that it is
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possible to get 100% accuracy on singlequotes checking,
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particularly since dialect, quite common in PG texts,
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upsets the normal rules so badly. Consider the sentence:
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'Tis often said that a man's a man for a' that.
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As humans, we recognize that both apostrophes are used
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for contractions rather than quotes, but it isn't easy
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to get a program to recognize that.
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Since bookloupe makes too many mistakes when trying to match
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singlequotes, it doesn't look for unbalanced singlequotes
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unless you specify the -s switch.
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Consider these sentences, which illustrate the main cases:
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'Tis often said that a fool and his money are soon parted.
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'Becky's goin' home,' said Tom.
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The dogs' tails wagged in unison.
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Those 'pack dogs' of yours look more like wolves.
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Typos (-t switch)
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It's not bookoupe's job to be a spelling checker, but it
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does check for a list of common typos and OCR errors if you
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use the -t switch. (The -x switch also turns typo checking on.)
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It also checks for character combinations, especially involving
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h and b, which are often confused by OCR, that rarely or never
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occur. For example, it queries "tbe" in a word. Now, "the" often
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occurs, but "tbe" is very rare (heartbeat, hotbed), so I'm
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playing the odds - a few false positives for many errors found.
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Similarly with "ii", which is a very common OCR error.
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Bookloupe suppresses multiple reporting of the first 40 "typos"
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found. This is to remove the annoyance of seeing something like
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"FN" (footnote) or "LK" (initials) flagged as a typo 147 times
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in a text.
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Line-end checking (-l switch to disable)
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All PG texts should have a Carriage Return (CR - character 13)
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and a Line Feed (LF - character 10) at end of each line,
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regardless of what O/S you made them on. DOS/Windows, Unix
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and Mac have different conventions, but the final text should
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always use a CR/LF pair as its line terminator.
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By default, bookloupe verifies that every line does have
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the correct terminator, but if you're on a work-in-progress
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in Linux, you might want to convert the line-ends as a final
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step, and not want to see thousands of errors every time you
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run bookloupe before that final step, so you can turn off
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this checking with the -l switch.
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Paranoid mode (-x switch to disable: Trust No One :-)
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-x switches OFF typo-checking, the -t flag, automatically
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and some extra checks like standalone 1 and 0 queries.
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Overview mode (-o switch)
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This mode just gives a count of queries found
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instead of a detailed list.
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Header quote (-h switch)
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If you use the -h switch, bookloupe will also display
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the Title, Author, Release and Edition fields from the
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PG header. This is useful mostly for the automated
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checks we do on recently-posted texts.
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Errors to stdout (-y switch)
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If you're just running bookloupe normally, you can ignore
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this. It's only there for programs that provide a front
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end to bookloupe. It makes error messages appear within
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the output of bookloupe so that the front end knows whether
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bookloupe ran OK.
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Verbose reporting (-v switch)
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Normally, if bookloupe sees lots of long lines, short lines,
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spaced dashes, non-ASCII characters or dot-commas ".," it
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assumes these are features of the text, counts and summarizes
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them at the top of its report, but does not list them
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individually. If the -v switch is on, bookloupe will list them all.
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Markup interpretation (-m switch)
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Normally, bookloupe flags anything it suspects of being HTML
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markup as a possible error. When you use the -m switch,
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however, it matches anything that looks like markup against
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a short list of common HTML tags and entities. If the markup
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is in that list, it either ignores the markup, in the case
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of a tag, or "interprets" the markup as its nearest ASCII
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equivalent, in the case of an entity. So, for example, using
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this switch, bookloupe will "see"
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“He went <i>thataway!</i>”
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as
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"He went thataway!"
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and report accordingly.
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This switch does not, not, NOT check the validity of HTML;
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it exists so that you can run bookloupe on most HTML texts
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for PG, and get sane results. It does not support all tags.
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It does not support all entities. When it sees a tag or entity
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it does not recognize, it will query it as HTML just as if
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you hadn't specified the -m switch.
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Bookloupe will automatically switch on markup interpretation
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if it sees a lot of tags that appear to be markup, so mostly, you
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won't have to specify this.
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User-defined typos (-u switch)
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If you have a file named bookloupe.typ or gutcheck.typ either
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in your current working directory or in the directory from
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which you explicitly invoked bookoupe, but not necessarily on
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your path, and if you specify the -u switch, bookloupe will
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query any word specified in that file. The file is simple: one
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word, in lower case, per line. Be careful not to put multiple
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words onto a line, or leave any rubbish other than the word on
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the line. You should have received a sample file bookloupe.typ
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with this package. The file may be encoded in UTF-8 (preferred),
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ISO-8859-1 (also known as Latin-1), or WINDOWS-1252 (also known,
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incorrectly, as ansi).
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Ignore DP markup (-d switch)
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Distributed Proofreaders (http://www.pgdp.net) has for some
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time been the main source of PG texts, and proofers there use
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special conventions. This switch understands those conventions,
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so that people can use bookloupe on files in process that still
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haven't had the special conventions removed yet. The special
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conventions supported are page-separators and
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"<sc>", "</sc>", "/*", "*/", "/#", "#/", "/$", "$/".
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You will probably only run bookloupe on a text once or maybe twice,
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just prior to uploading; it usually finds a few formatting problems;
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it also usually finds queries that aren't problems at all - it often
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questions Tables of Contents for having short lines, for example.
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These are called "false positives," and need a human to decide on
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them.
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The text should be standard prose, and already close to PG normal
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format (plain text, about 70 characters per line with blank lines
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between paragraphs).
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Bookloupe merely draws your attention to things that might be errors.
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It is NOT a substitute for human judgement. Formatting choices like
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short lines may be for a reason that this program can't understand.
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Even the most careful human proofing can leave errors behind in a
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text, and there are several automated checks you can do to help find
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them. Of these, spellchecking (with _very_ careful human judgement) is
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the most important and most useful.
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Bookloupe does perform some basic typo-checking if you ask it to,
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but its focus is on formatting errors specific to PG texts—
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mismatched quotes, non-ASCII characters, bad spacing, bad line
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length, HTML tags perhaps left from a conversion, unbalanced
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brackets.
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Suggestions for additional checks would be appreciated and duly
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considered, but no guarantees that they will be implemented.
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How does Jim Tinsley use gutcheck?
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Practically everyone I give gutcheck to asks me how _I_ use it.
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Well, when I get a text for posting, say filename.txt, I run
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gutcheck -o filename.txt
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That gives me a quick idea what I'm dealing with. It'll tell
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me what kind of problems gutcheck sees, and give me an idea
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of how much more work needs to be done on the text. Keep in
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mind that gutcheck doesn't do anything like a full spellcheck,
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but when I see a text that has a lot of problems, I assume that
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it probably needs a spellcheck too.
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Having got a feel for the ballpark, I run
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gutcheck filename.txt > jj
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where jj is my personal, all-purpose filename for temporary data
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that doesn't need to be kept. Then I open filename.txt and jj in
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a split-screen view in my editor, and work down the text, fixing
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whatever needs fixing, and skipping whatever doesn't. If your
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editor doesn't split-screen, you can get much the same effect by
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opening your original file in your normal editor, and jj (or your
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equivalent name) in something like Notepad, keeping both in view
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at the same time.
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Twice a day, an automatic process looks at all recently-posted
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texts, and emails Michael, me, and sometimes other people with
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their gutcheck summaries.
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Future development of bookloupe
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Bookloupe version 2.0 is intended to add UTF-8 support to
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gutcheck. All the functionality should already be implemented
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in the beta versions leading up to version 2.0, although
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some bugs may well remain.
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Future versions will add support for UTF-8 characters that
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are not in ISO-8859-1 (eg., curled quotation marks);
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characters that do not have a composed form (version 2
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treats these as taking 2 or more columns); zero width and
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wide characters (version 2 treats these as taking 1 column).
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Explanations of common bookloupe messages:
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--> 74 lines in this file have white space at end
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PG texts shouldn't have extra white space added at end of line.
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Don't worry too much about this; they're not doing any harm,
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and they'll be removed during posting anyway.
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--> 348 lines in this file are short. Not reporting short lines.
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--> 84 lines in this file are long. Not reporting long lines.
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--> 8 lines in this file are VERY long!
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If there are a lot of long or short lines, bookloupe won't list
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them individually. The short lines version of this message
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ali@0
|
330 |
is commonly seen when gutchecking poetry and some plays, where
|
ali@0
|
331 |
the normal line length is shorter than the standard for prose.
|
ali@0
|
332 |
A "VERY long" line is one over 80 characters. You normally
|
ali@0
|
333 |
shouldn't have any of these, but sometimes you may have to render
|
ali@0
|
334 |
a table that must be that long, or some special preformatted
|
ali@0
|
335 |
quotation that can't be broken.
|
ali@0
|
336 |
|
ali@0
|
337 |
|
ali@0
|
338 |
--> There are 75 spaced dashes and em-dashes in this file. Not reporting them.
|
ali@0
|
339 |
|
ali@0
|
340 |
The PG standard for an emdash--like these--is two minus signs
|
ali@0
|
341 |
with no spaces before or after them. However, some older texts
|
ali@0
|
342 |
used spaced dashes - like these -- and if there are very many
|
ali@74
|
343 |
such spaced dashes in the file, bookoupe just draws your
|
ali@0
|
344 |
attention to it and doesn't list them individually.
|
ali@0
|
345 |
|
ali@0
|
346 |
|
ali@0
|
347 |
|
ali@0
|
348 |
Line 3020 - Non-ASCII character 233
|
ali@0
|
349 |
|
ali@0
|
350 |
Standard PG texts should use only ASCII characters with values
|
ali@0
|
351 |
up to 127; however, non-English, accented characters can be
|
ali@0
|
352 |
represented according to several different non-ASCII encoding
|
ali@0
|
353 |
schemes, using values over 127. If you have a plain English text
|
ali@0
|
354 |
with a few accented characters in words like cafe or tete-a-tete,
|
ali@74
|
355 |
you might replace the accented characters with their unaccented
|
ali@0
|
356 |
versions. The English pound sign is another commonly-seen
|
ali@0
|
357 |
non-ASCII character. If you have enough non-ASCII characters in
|
ali@74
|
358 |
your text that you feel removing them would degrade your text,
|
ali@74
|
359 |
you should probably consider doing a UTF-8 text.
|
ali@0
|
360 |
|
ali@0
|
361 |
|
ali@0
|
362 |
|
ali@0
|
363 |
Line 1207 - Non-ISO-8859 character 156
|
ali@0
|
364 |
|
ali@0
|
365 |
Even in "8-bit" texts, there are distinctions between code sets.
|
ali@0
|
366 |
The ISO-8859 family of 8-bit code sets is the most commonly used
|
ali@0
|
367 |
in PG, and these sets do not define values in the range 128 through
|
ali@0
|
368 |
159 as printable characters. It's quite common for someone on a
|
ali@0
|
369 |
Windows or Mac machine to use a non-ISO character inadvertently,
|
ali@0
|
370 |
so this message warns that the character is not only not ASCII,
|
ali@0
|
371 |
but also outside the ISO-8859 range.
|
ali@0
|
372 |
|
ali@0
|
373 |
|
ali@0
|
374 |
|
ali@0
|
375 |
Line 46 - Tab character?
|
ali@0
|
376 |
|
ali@0
|
377 |
Some editors and WPs will put in Tab characters (character 9) to
|
ali@0
|
378 |
indicate indented text. You should not use these in a PG text,
|
ali@0
|
379 |
because you can't be sure how they will appear on a reader's
|
ali@0
|
380 |
screen. Find the Tab, and replace it with the appropriate number
|
ali@0
|
381 |
of spaces.
|
ali@0
|
382 |
|
ali@0
|
383 |
|
ali@0
|
384 |
Line 1327 - Tilde character?
|
ali@0
|
385 |
|
ali@0
|
386 |
The tilde character (~) might be legitimately used, but it's the
|
ali@0
|
387 |
character commonly used by OCR software to indicate a place where
|
ali@74
|
388 |
it couldn't make out the letter, so bookloupe flags it.
|
ali@0
|
389 |
|
ali@0
|
390 |
|
ali@0
|
391 |
|
ali@0
|
392 |
Line 1347 - Asterisk?
|
ali@0
|
393 |
|
ali@0
|
394 |
Asterisks are reported only in paranoid mode (see -x).
|
ali@0
|
395 |
Like tildes, they are often used to indicate errors, but they are
|
ali@0
|
396 |
also legitimately used as line delimiters and footnote markers.
|
ali@0
|
397 |
|
ali@0
|
398 |
|
ali@0
|
399 |
|
ali@0
|
400 |
Line 1451 - Long line 129
|
ali@0
|
401 |
|
ali@0
|
402 |
PG texts should have lines shorter than 76. There may be occasions
|
ali@0
|
403 |
where you decide that you really have to go out to 79 characters,
|
ali@74
|
404 |
but the sample above says that line 1451 is 129 characters long—
|
ali@0
|
405 |
probably two lines run together.
|
ali@0
|
406 |
|
ali@0
|
407 |
|
ali@0
|
408 |
|
ali@0
|
409 |
Line 1590 - Short line?
|
ali@0
|
410 |
|
ali@0
|
411 |
PG texts should have lines longer than 54 characters. However,
|
ali@0
|
412 |
there are special cases like poetry and tables of contents where
|
ali@74
|
413 |
the lines _should_ be shorter. So treat bookloupe warnings about
|
ali@0
|
414 |
short lines carefully. Sometimes it's a genuine formatting
|
ali@0
|
415 |
problem; sometimes the line really needs to be short.
|
ali@0
|
416 |
|
ali@74
|
417 |
Hint: bookloupe will not flag lines as short if they are indented
|
ali@74
|
418 |
—if they start with a space. I like to start inserted stanzas
|
ali@0
|
419 |
and other such items indented with a couple of spaces so that
|
ali@0
|
420 |
they stand out from the main text anyway.
|
ali@0
|
421 |
|
ali@0
|
422 |
|
ali@0
|
423 |
|
ali@0
|
424 |
Line 1804 - Begins with punctuation?
|
ali@0
|
425 |
|
ali@0
|
426 |
Lines should normally not begin with commas, periods and so on.
|
ali@0
|
427 |
An exception is ellipses . . . which can happen at start of line.
|
ali@0
|
428 |
|
ali@0
|
429 |
|
ali@0
|
430 |
|
ali@0
|
431 |
Line 1850 - Spaced em-dash?
|
ali@0
|
432 |
|
ali@0
|
433 |
The PG standard for an em-dash--like these--is two minus signs
|
ali@74
|
434 |
with no spaces before or after them. Bookloupe flags non-PG
|
ali@0
|
435 |
em-dashes - like this one. Normally, you will replace it with a
|
ali@0
|
436 |
PG-standard em-dash.
|
ali@0
|
437 |
|
ali@0
|
438 |
|
ali@0
|
439 |
|
ali@0
|
440 |
Line 1904 - Query he/be error?
|
ali@0
|
441 |
|
ali@74
|
442 |
Bookloupe makes a very minor effort to look for that scourge of all
|
ali@0
|
443 |
proofreaders, "be" replacing "he" or vice-versa, and draws your
|
ali@0
|
444 |
attention to it when it thinks it has found one.
|
ali@0
|
445 |
|
ali@0
|
446 |
|
ali@0
|
447 |
|
ali@0
|
448 |
Line 2017 - Query digit in a1most
|
ali@0
|
449 |
|
ali@0
|
450 |
The digit 1 is commonly OCRed for the letter l, the digit 0 for
|
ali@74
|
451 |
the letter O, and so on. When bookloupe sees a mix of digits and
|
ali@0
|
452 |
letters, it warns you. It may generate a false positive for
|
ali@0
|
453 |
something like 7am.
|
ali@0
|
454 |
|
ali@0
|
455 |
|
ali@0
|
456 |
|
ali@0
|
457 |
Line 2083 - Query standalone 0
|
ali@0
|
458 |
|
ali@74
|
459 |
In paranoid mode (see -x) only, bookloupe warns about the digit 0
|
ali@0
|
460 |
and the number 1 standing alone as a word. This can happen if the
|
ali@0
|
461 |
OCR misreads the words O or I.
|
ali@0
|
462 |
|
ali@0
|
463 |
|
ali@0
|
464 |
|
ali@0
|
465 |
Line 2115 - Query word whetber
|
ali@0
|
466 |
|
ali@74
|
467 |
If you have switched typo-checking on, bookloupe looks for
|
ali@0
|
468 |
potential typos, especially common h/b errors. It's not
|
ali@0
|
469 |
infallible; it sometimes queries legit words, but it's
|
ali@0
|
470 |
always worth taking a look.
|
ali@0
|
471 |
|
ali@0
|
472 |
|
ali@0
|
473 |
|
ali@0
|
474 |
Line 2190 column 14 - Missing space?
|
ali@0
|
475 |
|
ali@0
|
476 |
Omitting a space is a very common error,especially coming from
|
ali@0
|
477 |
OCRed text,and can be hard for a human to spot. The commas in
|
ali@0
|
478 |
the previous sentence illustrate the kind of thing I mean.
|
ali@0
|
479 |
|
ali@0
|
480 |
|
ali@0
|
481 |
|
ali@0
|
482 |
Line 2240 column 48 - Spaced punctuation?
|
ali@0
|
483 |
|
ali@0
|
484 |
The flip side of the "missing space" error , here , is when extra
|
ali@0
|
485 |
spaces are added before punctuation . Some old texts appear to add
|
ali@0
|
486 |
extra spaces around punctuation consistently, but this was a
|
ali@0
|
487 |
typographical convention rather than the author's intent, and the
|
ali@0
|
488 |
extra "spaces" should be removed when preparing a PG text.
|
ali@0
|
489 |
|
ali@0
|
490 |
|
ali@0
|
491 |
|
ali@0
|
492 |
Line 2301 column 19 - Unspaced quotes?
|
ali@0
|
493 |
|
ali@0
|
494 |
Another common spacing problem occurs in a phrase like "You wait
|
ali@0
|
495 |
there,"he said.
|
ali@0
|
496 |
|
ali@0
|
497 |
|
ali@0
|
498 |
|
ali@0
|
499 |
Line 2385 column 27 - Wrongspaced quotes?
|
ali@0
|
500 |
|
ali@74
|
501 |
Bookloupe checks whether a quote seems to be a start or end quote,
|
ali@74
|
502 |
and queries those that appear to be misplaced. This does give rise
|
ali@74
|
503 |
to false positives when quotes are nested, for example:
|
ali@0
|
504 |
|
ali@0
|
505 |
"And how," she asked, "will your "friends" help you now?"
|
ali@0
|
506 |
|
ali@0
|
507 |
but these false positives are worth it because of the many cases
|
ali@0
|
508 |
that this test catches, notably those like:
|
ali@0
|
509 |
|
ali@0
|
510 |
"And how, "she said," will your friends help you now?"
|
ali@0
|
511 |
|
ali@0
|
512 |
Sometimes a "wrongspaced quotes" query will arise because an earlier
|
ali@0
|
513 |
quote in the paragraph was omitted, so if the place specified seems
|
ali@0
|
514 |
to be OK, look back to see whether there's a problem in the preceding
|
ali@0
|
515 |
lines.
|
ali@0
|
516 |
|
ali@0
|
517 |
|
ali@0
|
518 |
|
ali@0
|
519 |
Line 2400 - HTML Tag? <PRE>
|
ali@0
|
520 |
|
ali@0
|
521 |
Some PG texts have been converted from HTML, and not all of the
|
ali@0
|
522 |
HTML tags have been removed.
|
ali@0
|
523 |
|
ali@0
|
524 |
|
ali@0
|
525 |
|
ali@0
|
526 |
Line 2402 - HTML symbol? &emdash;
|
ali@0
|
527 |
|
ali@0
|
528 |
Similarly, special HTML symbol characters can survive into PG
|
ali@0
|
529 |
texts. Can occasionally produce amusing false positives like
|
ali@0
|
530 |
. . . Marwick & Co were well known for it;
|
ali@0
|
531 |
|
ali@0
|
532 |
|
ali@0
|
533 |
|
ali@0
|
534 |
Line 2540 - Mismatched quotes
|
ali@0
|
535 |
|
ali@74
|
536 |
Another bookloupe mainstay—unclosed doublequotes in a paragraph.
|
ali@0
|
537 |
See the discussion of quotes in the switches section near the
|
ali@0
|
538 |
start of this file.
|
ali@0
|
539 |
|
ali@74
|
540 |
Since the mismatch doesn't occur on any one line, bookloupe quotes
|
ali@0
|
541 |
the line number of the first blank line following the paragraph,
|
ali@0
|
542 |
since this is the point where it reconciles the count of quotes.
|
ali@74
|
543 |
However, if bookloupe is echoing lines, that is, you haven't used
|
ali@0
|
544 |
the -e switch, it will show the _first_ line of the paragraph,
|
ali@0
|
545 |
to help you find the place without using line numbers. The
|
ali@0
|
546 |
offending paragraph is therefore between the quoted line and
|
ali@0
|
547 |
the line number given.
|
ali@0
|
548 |
|
ali@0
|
549 |
|
ali@0
|
550 |
|
ali@0
|
551 |
Line 2587 - Mismatched single quotes
|
ali@0
|
552 |
|
ali@0
|
553 |
Only checked with the -s switch, since checking single quotes is
|
ali@0
|
554 |
not a very reliable process. Otherwise, the same logic as for
|
ali@0
|
555 |
doublequotes applies.
|
ali@0
|
556 |
|
ali@0
|
557 |
|
ali@0
|
558 |
|
ali@0
|
559 |
Line 2877 - Mismatched round brackets?
|
ali@0
|
560 |
|
ali@0
|
561 |
Also curly and square brackets. Texts with a lot of brackets, like
|
ali@0
|
562 |
plays with bracketed stage instructions, may have mismatches.
|
ali@0
|
563 |
|
ali@0
|
564 |
|
ali@0
|
565 |
Line 3150 - No CR?
|
ali@0
|
566 |
Line 3204 - Two successive CRs?
|
ali@0
|
567 |
Line 3281 position 75 - CR without LF?
|
ali@0
|
568 |
|
ali@0
|
569 |
These are the invalid line-end warnings. See the discussion of
|
ali@0
|
570 |
line-end checking in the switches section near the start of this
|
ali@0
|
571 |
file. If you see these, and your editor doesn't show anything
|
ali@0
|
572 |
wrong, you should probably try deleting the characters just before
|
ali@0
|
573 |
and after the line end, and the line-end itself, then retyping the
|
ali@0
|
574 |
characters and the line-end.
|
ali@0
|
575 |
|
ali@0
|
576 |
|
ali@0
|
577 |
Line 2940 - Paragraph starts with lower-case
|
ali@0
|
578 |
|
ali@0
|
579 |
A common error in an e-text is for an extra blank line
|
ali@0
|
580 |
|
ali@0
|
581 |
to be put in, like the blank line above, and this often
|
ali@0
|
582 |
shows up as a new paragraph beginning with lower case.
|
ali@0
|
583 |
Sometimes the blank line is deliberate, as when a
|
ali@0
|
584 |
quotation is inserted in a speech. Use your judgement.
|
ali@0
|
585 |
|
ali@0
|
586 |
|
ali@0
|
587 |
Line 2987 - Extra period?
|
ali@0
|
588 |
|
ali@0
|
589 |
An extra period. is a. common problem in OCRed text. and usually
|
ali@0
|
590 |
arises when a speck of dust on the page is mistaken for a period.
|
ali@0
|
591 |
or. as occasionally happens. when a comma loses its tail.
|
ali@0
|
592 |
|
ali@0
|
593 |
|
ali@0
|
594 |
Line 3012 column 12 - Double punctuation?
|
ali@0
|
595 |
|
ali@0
|
596 |
Double punctuation., like that,, is a common typo and
|
ali@0
|
597 |
scanno. Some books have much legit double punctuation,
|
ali@0
|
598 |
like etc., etc., but it's worth checking anyway.
|
ali@0
|
599 |
|
ali@0
|
600 |
|
ali@0
|
601 |
|
ali@0
|
602 |
* * * *
|
ali@0
|
603 |
|
ali@0
|
604 |
For Windows-only users who are unfamiliar with DOS:
|
ali@0
|
605 |
|
ali@0
|
606 |
If you're a Windows-only user, you need to save
|
ali@74
|
607 |
bookloupe.exe into the folder (directory) where the
|
ali@0
|
608 |
text file you want to check is. Let's say your
|
ali@74
|
609 |
text file is in C:\gut, then you should save
|
ali@74
|
610 |
bookloupe.exe into C:\gut.
|
ali@0
|
611 |
|
ali@74
|
612 |
Now get to a console. You can do this by
|
ali@0
|
613 |
selecting the "Command Prompt" or "MS-DOS Prompt"
|
ali@0
|
614 |
option that will be somewhere on your
|
ali@0
|
615 |
Start/Programs menu.
|
ali@0
|
616 |
|
ali@74
|
617 |
Now get into the C:\gut directory.
|
ali@74
|
618 |
You can do this using the cd (change directory)
|
ali@0
|
619 |
command, like this:
|
ali@74
|
620 |
cd \gut
|
ali@0
|
621 |
and your prompt will change to
|
ali@74
|
622 |
C:\gut>
|
ali@0
|
623 |
so you know you're in the right place.
|
ali@0
|
624 |
|
ali@0
|
625 |
Now type
|
ali@74
|
626 |
bookloupe yourfile.txt
|
ali@74
|
627 |
and you'll see bookloupe's report
|
ali@0
|
628 |
|
ali@74
|
629 |
By default, bookloupe prints its queries to screen.
|
ali@0
|
630 |
If you want to create a file of them, to edit
|
ali@0
|
631 |
against the text, you can use the greater-than
|
ali@0
|
632 |
sign (>) to tell it to output the report to a
|
ali@0
|
633 |
file. For example, if you want its report in a
|
ali@74
|
634 |
file called queries.lst, you could type
|
ali@74
|
635 |
|
ali@74
|
636 |
bookloupe yourfile.txt > queries.lst
|
ali@0
|
637 |
|
ali@0
|
638 |
The queries.lst file will then contain the listing
|
ali@0
|
639 |
of possible formatting errors, and you can
|
ali@0
|
640 |
edit it alongside your text.
|
ali@0
|
641 |
|
ali@0
|
642 |
Whatever you do, DON'T make the filename after
|
ali@0
|
643 |
the greater-than sign the name of a file already
|
ali@0
|
644 |
on your disk that you want to keep, because
|
ali@74
|
645 |
the greater-than sign will cause bookloupe to
|
ali@0
|
646 |
replace any existing file of that name.
|
ali@0
|
647 |
|
ali@0
|
648 |
So, for example, if you have two Tolstoy files
|
ali@0
|
649 |
that you want to check, called WARPEACE.TXT and
|
ali@0
|
650 |
ANNAK.TXT, make sure that neither of these names
|
ali@0
|
651 |
is ever used following the greater-than sign.
|
ali@0
|
652 |
To check these correctly, you might do:
|
ali@0
|
653 |
|
ali@74
|
654 |
bookloupe warpeace.txt > war.lst
|
ali@0
|
655 |
|
ali@0
|
656 |
and
|
ali@0
|
657 |
|
ali@74
|
658 |
bookloupe annak.txt > annak.lst
|
ali@0
|
659 |
|
ali@0
|
660 |
separately. Then you can look at war.lst and annak.lst
|
ali@74
|
661 |
to see the bookloupe reports.
|
ali@83
|
662 |
|
ali@83
|
663 |
For Windows-only users who want to use bookloupe from guiguts:
|
ali@83
|
664 |
|
ali@83
|
665 |
1) If you haven't already done so, download bookloupe-win32-xxx.zip
|
ali@83
|
666 |
from http://www.juiblex.co.uk/pgdp/bookloupe/
|
ali@83
|
667 |
|
ali@83
|
668 |
2) Extract the files into a suitable folder, e.g. C:\DP\bookloupe
|
ali@83
|
669 |
|
ali@83
|
670 |
3) Start Guiguts
|
ali@83
|
671 |
|
ali@83
|
672 |
4) Choose Preferences | File Paths | Set File Paths..
|
ali@83
|
673 |
|
ali@83
|
674 |
5) Click the "Locate Gutcheck..." button
|
ali@83
|
675 |
|
ali@83
|
676 |
6) Browse to the folder where you extracted bookloupe
|
ali@83
|
677 |
|
ali@83
|
678 |
7) Double-click bookloupe.exe
|