CVS WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20

Update of /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20
In directory gil:/tmp/cvs-serv17513

Modified Files:
	its20.html its20.odd 
Log Message:
edited 2.1

--- /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/its20.html	2013/06/17 09:24:19	1.452
+++ /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/its20.html	2013/06/17 09:30:06	1.453
@@ -308,8 +308,8 @@
               direction of blocks, embeddings and overrides for the Unicode bidirectional
               algorithm.</p></li><li><p><a href="#language-information" shape="rect">Language Information</a>: expresses the
               language of a given piece of content.</p></li><li><p><a href="#elements-within-text" shape="rect">Elements Witin Text:</a> expresses how
-              content of an element is related to the text flow (constitute its own segment like
-              paragraphs, be part of a segment like emphasis marker etc.).</p></li><li><p><a href="#domain" shape="rect">Domain</a>: identifies the topic or subject of the
+              content of an element is related to the text flow (constitutes its own segment like
+              paragraphs, is part of a segment like emphasis marker etc.).</p></li><li><p><a href="#domain" shape="rect">Domain</a>: identifies the topic or subject of the
               annotated content for translation-related applications.</p></li><li><p><a href="#textanalysis" shape="rect">Text Analysis</a>: annotates content with lexical or
               conceptual information (e.g. for the purpose of contextual disambiguation).</p></li><li><p><a href="#LocaleFilter" shape="rect">Locale Filter</a>: specifies that a piece of content
               is only applicable to certain locales. </p></li><li><p><a href="#provenance" shape="rect">Provenance</a>: communicates the identity of agents
@@ -328,7 +328,7 @@
               measurement of the localization quality of a document or an item in a document.</p></li><li><p><a href="#mtconfidence" shape="rect">MT Confidence</a>: indicates the confidence that MT
               systems provide about their translation. </p></li><li><p><a href="#allowedchars" shape="rect">Allowed Characters</a>: specifies the characters that
               are permitted in a given piece of content.</p></li><li><p><a href="#storagesize" shape="rect">Storage Size</a>: specifies the maximum storage size
-              of a given content.</p></li></ul></div><div class="div2">
+              of a given piece of content.</p></li></ul></div><div class="div2">
 <h3><a href="#contents" shape="rect"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="basic-concepts-selection" id="basic-concepts-selection" shape="rect"/>2.2 Selection</h3><p>Information (e.g. “translate this”) captured by an ITS data category always pertains to one or more XML or HTML nodes, primarily element and attribute nodes. In a sense, the relevant node(s) get “selected”. Selection may be explicit or implicit. ITS distinguishes two mechanisms for explicit selection: (1) local approach, and (2) global approach (via <code class="its-elem-markup">rules</code>). Both local and global approach can interact with each other, and with additional ITS dimensions such as inheritance and defaults.</p><p>The mechanisms defined for ITS selection resemble those defined in <a title="Cascading Style Sheets,&#xA;                level 2 revision 1 CSS 2.1 Specification" href="#css2-1" shape="rect">[CSS 21]</a>. The local approach can be compared to the
             <code>style</code> attribute in HTML/XHTML, and the global approach is similar to the <code>style</code> element in HTML/XHTML.</p><ul><li><p>the local approach puts ITS markup in the relevant element of the host vocabulary (e.g. the <code>author</code> element in DocBook)</p></li><li><p>the global, <a href="#selection-global" shape="rect">rule-based approach</a> puts the ITS
               markup in elements defined by ITS itself (namely the <code class="its-elem-markup">rules</code> element)</p></li></ul><p>ITS usually uses XPath in rules for identifying nodes although CSS Selectors and other query languages can in addition be implemented by applications.</p><p>ITS 2.0 can be used with XML documents (e.g. a DocBook article), HTML documents, or schemas (e.g. an XML Schema document for a proprietary document format).</p><p>The following two examples provide more details about the distinction between the local and global approach, using the <a href="#trans-datacat" shape="rect">Translate</a> data category as example.</p><div class="div3">
--- /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/its20.odd	2013/06/17 09:24:19	1.454
+++ /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/its20.odd	2013/06/17 09:30:06	1.455
@@ -444,8 +444,8 @@
             <item><ref target="#language-information">Language Information</ref>: expresses the
               language of a given piece of content.</item>
             <item><ref target="#elements-within-text">Elements Witin Text:</ref> expresses how
-              content of an element is related to the text flow (constitute its own segment like
-              paragraphs, be part of a segment like emphasis marker etc.).</item>
+              content of an element is related to the text flow (constitutes its own segment like
+              paragraphs, is part of a segment like emphasis marker etc.).</item>
             <item><ref target="#domain">Domain</ref>: identifies the topic or subject of the
               annotated content for translation-related applications.</item>
             
@@ -507,7 +507,7 @@
               are permitted in a given piece of content.</item>
             
             <item><ref target="#storagesize">Storage Size</ref>: specifies the maximum storage size
-              of a given content.</item></list>
+              of a given piece of content.</item></list>
 </div>
 
         <div xml:id="basic-concepts-selection">

Received on Monday, 17 June 2013 09:30:11 UTC