Quotations are the heart of Thesa. They capture an idea from an article or book that is new or interesting. Topics provide access to related ideas. Bibliographic references provide a source for reading the quotation in context, and further exploration of the author's ideas.
If copyright clearance is required, a quotation skeleton replaces the quotation. See (ThesaHelp: help with quotation skeletons) for further discussion.
A quotation has a descriptive label, a bibliographic reference, and links to one or more topics of related quotations. A quotation includes a few sentences upto a paragraph or two. Quotations are from books, published articles, and technical reports. Notes may be taken from talks, trade journals, and notebooks.
Quotations are typed instead of copy/paste. This helps ensure that they standalone and have value, but may lead to transcription errors. Ellipsis and annotation are freely used. See below for conventions.
Each quotation has a descriptive label, usually one or two lines of text. The label is a headnote that captures the important idea of the quotation. The reader uses the label to decide whether or not a quotation may be relevant.
Eight words are enough to identify most quotations in a search engine. Two word HTML links invoke a phrase search in Google. There is a link for the first eight words, the first eight words after page breaks, and the last eight words.
Thesa uses the following conventions:
- Quotations elide text with "..." and provide clarifications with brackets (e.g., '[Andrew File System]').
- Internal references are abbreviated within brackets (e.g., [author, title, date]).
- If a quote starts with a reference, the quotation is from that author.
- All quotations were typed by hand. Quotations are spell-checked. Misspellings in the original are likely to be lost. Variant spellings are usually retained. Missing words and other transcription errors are usually caught when labeling the quote.
- Capitalization, notations, and bold/italic phrases are preserved. If a quote starts midsentence, the first letter is lower-case. If the quote ends midsentence, there is no '.'.
- Italics are usually dropped from one-letter words (e.g., 'x' for a math unknown).
- Accents are dropt from non-English words and names. They will eventually be restored.
- Bullets are indicated by a '@' character.
- Math expressions are spelled out as necessary (e.g.., '.alpha.'). Subscripts are indicated with '_', superscripts with '^'.
- Page breaks are indicated by a page reference between brackets (e.g., '... [p. 345] It appears'). A page break midsentence is delayed to the first period or comma.
- A line break is indicated by '//'. Paragraph breaks are usually ignored.
- Font styles other than bold and italic (e.g., small caps) are represented by single quotes.
- Tabbing is ignored.