No. It was developed and used by Joshua
Hutchinson, when he used to post DP scansets to PG. I got the
material from his emails to the WWers a few months ago.
So far as I know, only Joshua has done this with
scans. Some submitters (usually from DP) incorporate scansets into their
HTML files, with the file's page numbers linked to the scans. Offhand, I
don't have any examples of this.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, March 19, 2010 5:27
PM
Subject: [gutvol-d] Re: save those
pagenumber references
So far this "spec" seems to be primarily a legend.
Is it
documented anywhere?
On Fri, Mar 19, 2010 at 5:09 PM, Al Haines (shaw)
<ajhaines@shaw.ca>
wrote:
Jim,
the material below describes the scanset naming standard used by PG. For an
example, go to http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/25896, click on the Base
Directory link at the bottom of the book's catalog info, above the actual
files. You should see a 25896-page-images folder. Click on it to
see the actual files.
Al
Basic format:
The
prefix for the cover pages is: "c".
The prefix for the roman pages is:
"f".
The prefix for the arabic pages is: "p".
***
For blank
pages there should be no file and the page number should be
skipped.
Optionally an image saying: "This page is blank in the
original." may be
inserted.
***
Example of file naming:
front cover
c0001.png
back cover
c0002.png
spine
c0003.png
i title page
f0001.png
ii title verso f0002.png
iii dedication
f0003.png
iv is blank
v contents
f0005.png
page 1
p0001.png
page 2
p0002.png
image on page 2 p0002-image1.png
image on
page 2 p0002-image2.png
page 3
p0003.png
page 4 is blank
page 5
p0005.png
...
...
page 9999
p9999.png
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