Published June 30, 2018 | Version 2.0.1
Book Open

The Unicode Cookbook for Linguists: Managing writing systems using orthography profiles

  • 1. University of Zurich
  • 2. University of Marburg

Description

This text is a practical guide for linguists, and programmers, who work with data in multilingual computational environments. We introduce the basic concepts needed to understand how writing systems and character encodings function, and how they work together at the intersection between the Unicode Standard and the International Phonetic Alphabet. Although these standards are often met with frustration by users, they nevertheless provide language researchers and programmers with a consistent computational architecture needed to process, publish and analyze lexical data from the world’s languages. Thus we bring to light common, but not always transparent, pitfalls which researchers face when working with Unicode and IPA. Having identified and overcome these pitfalls involved in making writing systems and character encodings syntactically and semantically interoperable (to the extent that they can be), we created a suite of open-source Python and R tools to work with languages using orthography profiles that describe author- or document-specific orthographic conventions. In this cookbook we describe a formal specification of orthography profiles and provide recipes using open source tools to show how users can segment text, analyze it, identify errors, and to transform it into different written forms for comparative linguistics research.

Notes

This is the Language Science Press publication version.

Files

cookbook-2.0.1.zip

Files (20.4 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:ec73b5e67fa112f2446b12c841f06ee8
10.2 MB Download
md5:7c8ad8a46660aa2ef9a1ac7787b570b3
10.2 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works

Funding

QUANTHISTLING – Quantitative modeling of historical-comparative linguistics: Unraveling the phylogeny of native South American languages 240816
European Commission