On Mon, Oct 18, 2010 at 1:14 PM, Karen Lofstrom <klofstrom@gmail.com> wrote:
> Michael S. Hart wrote:

> Why make it harder than it has to be?
> Why reinvent the wheel yet again?
> A simple search for even just three short words ...

Because you can't put "search for XXX" as a scholarly citation.
Pagination has been the old scholarly default, but it doesn't work if
there is more than one edition of the book.

I should have expected that a community such as this, which contains
no scholars and is often hostile to them (or should I be saying us?
I'm an independent scholar, if not an academic), wouldn't understand.

Part of the solution has to be ebook readers and software that make
displaying scholarly apparatus, such as footnotes and sidenotes,
endnotes and references, as well as the suggested chapter and verse
numbers, easy to do.  Also making annotations, inserting notes, making
links.

We'll get there eventually.


The simplest way to do a cite would be along the lines of 'The book of so and so' by 'Mouse, Antony'. Retrieved from Project Gutenberg on 10 Oct 2020, etext #50000, HTML format, characters 45,123-45,293.