
The etext in question is #3441. The underlying files are located in etext02, and named 71001107.txt (7-bit) and 71001108.txt (8-bit), plus their zip files. There's no HTML version, hence no illustrations. Footnotes are indicated by [FN#1], [FN#2], etc. The footnotes themselves (all 460 of them) are collected at file-end. If page numbers are indicated in the file, I can't figure out where or how, so they're probably not there. I mentioned that this was one of a multi-volume set. There are 16 volumes, of which this is volume 7. The entire set's etext numbers are 3435-3450, the file names are from 11001107.* to g1001107.*, all files in etext02. The last number of the file name is 7 for a 7-bit file or 8 for an 8-bit file, plus a zip file for each, i.e. 4 files for each volume. The 7-bit files can be ignored, since the corrected 8-bit text file (and a new HTML file, if one is prepared) would be processed by PG's posting software, which will generate a new 7-bit text file. As I mentioned in another thread, the existing credits will be transferred to any new version, with correctors' names added. Gutvol-d doesn't handle attachments, so I'm prepared to send the list of proposed corrections off-list as an attachment, or I can post it as part of this thread (which is probably better, since anyone interested can get it, and I won't be bothered with sending it to bunches of people). Al -----Original Message----- From: gutvol-d-bounces@lists.pglaf.org [mailto:gutvol-d-bounces@lists.pglaf.org] On Behalf Of don kretz Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2012 3:51 PM To: Project Gutenberg Volunteer Discussion Subject: Re: [gutvol-d] Goals and scope (Re: Version control systems) Al, I may be able to help you with this. If the text includes the page numbers and footnotes using one of the standard DP markup schemes, I can convert that automatically into better page numbers and footnotes, and we may be able to handle cross-references the same way I do with Encyclopedia Britannica. The text errors still need someone with an editor, of course. As an extreme example, I've got an errata report on my hands that's 3400 lines long, that I haven't had the courage to plow through yet. The reporter lists something wrong on almost every one of the book's nearly 400 pages. On top of that, he'd like an HTML version created with the footnotes cross-linked and from what I can tell, the page numbers inserted because there are internal references to them. The reported-on text is one volume of a series, so fixing/reposting it will take it out of sync with the rest. Probably simpler to figure out the source edition and run the whole series through DP, to replace the current files.