📄️ TermRef Syntax
As an author or curator, you want to be able to mark words or phrases and have them refer to (the documentation of) a particular concept or other semantic unit. Such marked-up words or phrases are called TermRefs.
📄️ Term Identifiers
A Term Identifier is a text that is used for identifying a semantic unit within a designated terminology. This means that it can be used for selecting an MRG entry that exists in the MRG associated with that terminology. It does NOT mean that any such text will actually identify such an MRG entry. @, that is used for Identifying a Semantic Unit within a designated Terminology. If @ is omitted, the current (or default) Terminology is assumed.">Term identifiers can be ambiguous (refer to multiple MRG entries). It is also possible that a @, that is used for Identifying a Semantic Unit within a designated Terminology. If @ is omitted, the current (or default) Terminology is assumed.">term identifier does not identify any such MRG entry.
📄️ Terminology Identifiers
A Terminology Identifier a text that identifies a terminology from within a particular scope, and can also be used to find the MRG file (in the glossarydir of that same scope) that contains entries for every term contained in that terminology.
📄️ MRG References
MRG References (or MRGRefs for short) are textual constructs that refer to a specific terminology within a particular scope. The purpose of an MRG Reference is that it can be converted (by the HRGT) into a text that contains a human readable glossary of the terms contained in that terminology.
📄️ MRG Terminology Construction
Curators need the ability to construct (different versions of) the terminology for any scope they curate. This page documents
📄️ MRG Term Selection
Curators must have the ability to determine which terms are, or are not part of a terminology, as a prerequisite for generating a corresponding MRG. This document specifies the syntax for the instructions that curators can use to do this, and also how these instructions are being processed, which leads to a provisional MRG that contains provisional MRG entries for each of these terms. This processing is the first step in MRG generation