Hi Everyone, > Everything in Wordhoard is in the public domain, and I’ll be happy to put the data on github if there is a demand for them. > which James Tauber and Giuseppe Celano are in the position to integrate with the Scaife viewer @Helma do you know if these are already in a repo managed by the Perseus project? If they are not available in any official version control, the CLTK's repos are meant for just this (<https://github.com/cltk/ <https://github.com/cltk/>>). Anyone who knows and cares about this data set could manage it, out of the CLTK organization. @Martin Off the top of my head, one likely use of this metrical data would be to assist in tagging meter of unseen (non-Homeric) Greek hexameter. We could talk further on the Issues page about this, others would know better than I. Finally, and this is a larger point: I am seeing more and more useful algorithms, usually embedded within user-friendly websites, from Classicists. Once your work reaches some maturity, I strongly suggest that you implement your code in the CLTK, for use in processing pipelines, not just a GUI. What is an end product for you might become the jumping-off place for another. Regards, Kyle Jul 24, 2018, 12:04 PM by [log in to unmask]: > Hi Helma, > > is there a convenient way (other than impolitely scraping your db) to access those corrected parses in anticipation of the “integration with the Scaife viewer”? I use the treebank files as the basis for a simple teaching page (e.g. > http://hypotactic.com/od6c.html <http://hypotactic.com/od6c.html>> ) and it would be useful to have more reliable parses. The data could also be fed into the Bridge (> http://bridge.haverford.edu/ <http://bridge.haverford.edu/>> ). > > David Chamberlain > Deptartment of Classics > University of Oregon > > > On July 24, 2018 at 11:01:46 AM, Helma Dik (> [log in to unmask] <mailto:[log in to unmask]>> ) wrote: > > >> >> >> > Martin's parses are incorporated atperseus.uchicago, which James Tauber and Giuseppe Celano are in theposition to integrate with the Scaife viewer. I've made a minimalnumber of edits over the years, separating sheep from apples, urinefrom fair winds, and the like, to align things further withLiddell&Scott-based Perseus lemmatization. > > I would be very interested in metrical data compared withmorphology data for application to non-metrical texts (so as todisambiguate quantities of certain endings; e.g., acc pl -αςdepending on pos and lemma). > > All best, > Helma > > Helma Dik > Department of Classics > University of Chicago > > > > > > To unsubscribe from the DIGITALCLASSICIST list, click the following link: > > https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=DIGITALCLASSICIST&A=1 <https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=DIGITALCLASSICIST&A=1> > > > ######################################################################## To unsubscribe from the DIGITALCLASSICIST list, click the following link: https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=DIGITALCLASSICIST&A=1