Interlinear glossing for the browser
Leipzig.js is a small JavaScript utility that makes it easy to add interlinear glosses to webpages.
An interlinear gloss is a way of presenting linguistic data that helps makes it clear what the different words and morphemes of a phrase mean. They consist of multiple lines of data, aligned horizontally at the word boundaries of the original language.
Many interlinear glosses consist of three lines:
- The first line is used for data in the original language;
- A morpheme-by-morpheme analysis of the original language;
- A free or colloquial translation, not aligned at word boundaries.
Additional lines may be used to show phonemic information, or other analyses that might be relevant to the phrase being glossed.
Interlinear glosses help linguists present language data to audiences that might not be familiar with the language being analyzed, and are an integral part of documenting and discussing languages.
Leipzig.js aims to be a simple, lightweight solution for interlinear glossing on the web. By relying on existing HTML tags, it degrades gracefully when either JavaScript or CSS is not present.
While basic usage of Leipzig.js is dead simple (see the Usage section below), more customizable glossing can be achieved by using the library's flexible API.
Glosses formatted with Leipzig.js are responsive, and contain numerous CSS classes that can be used to style individual lines in the gloss.
Leipzig.js tries to strike the right balance between ease of creation and beauty of output. It should be easy enough to use for people new to web authorship, while remaining powerful and customizable enough for people that want more control over their interlinear glosses.
Leipzig.js has no front-end dependencies, and should work on most modern browsers, including IE9+.
For more information about interlinear glossing, visit the homepage for the Leipzig Glossing Rules (from which Leipzig.js gets its name). The Leipzig Glossing rules homepage also contains references to other important works on interlinear glossing.
You can install Leipzig.js using npm
or Bower
, or by downloading the latest version from the github repository:
$ npm install --save leipzig
$ bower install --save leipzig
$ git clone https://github.com/bdchauvette/leipzig.js.git
Alternatively, you can skip installing Leipzig.js on your own server, and can use the jsDelivr CDN as described in the next step.
Include the main leipzig.js
file somewhere on your page, ideally at the
bottom of the <body>
:
<script src="path/to/leipzig/dist/leipzig.min.js"></script>
Leipzig.js comes with some basic styling, which you can include by adding the
Leipzig.js stylesheet in the <head>
of your page:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="path/to/leipzig/dist/leipzig.css">
You can also include the latest version of Leipzig.js automatically by linking to the project files on the jsDelivr CDN:
<!-- CSS -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/leipzig@latest/dist/leipzig.min.css">
<!-- JavaScript -->
<script src="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/leipzig@latest/dist/leipzig.min.js"></script>
For more information about jsDelivr, you can visit the jsDelivr homepage or read the following blog posts:
To use the Leipzig.js default configuration, just add a data-gloss
attribute
to the examples you want to be glossed:
<div data-gloss>
<p>Gila abur-u-n ferma hamišaluǧ güǧüna amuq’-da-č.</p>
<p>now they-OBL-GEN farm forever behind stay-FUT-NEG</p>
<p>‘Now their farm will not stay behind forever.’</p>
</div>
Leipzig.js will find all of the blocks that have the data-gloss
attribute and
turn them into nicely formatted interlinear glosses.
Finally, you just need to tell Leipzig.js to go to work by adding the following
<script>
somewhere after the one you added in Step 2:
<script>
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function() {
Leipzig().gloss();
});
</script>
If you're using jQuery, you can use the following script instead:
<script>
$(function() { Leipzig().gloss(); });
</script>
<html>
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/leipzig@latest/dist/leipzig.min.css">
</head>
<body>
<div data-gloss>
<p>Ein Beispiel</p>
<p>DET.NOM.N.SG example</p>
<p>‘An example’</p>
</div>
<script src="//cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/leipzig@latest/dist/leipzig.min.js"></script>
<script>
document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', function() {
Leipzig().gloss();
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
Please see the Documentation page on the wiki.
Please see the Examples page on the Leipzig.js homepage.
$ git clone https://github.com/bdchauvette/leipzig.js.git
$ cd leipzig.js
$ npm install
The main source files are in src/
.
Leipzig.js uses gulp
to build the files for distribution found in dist/
.
The following tasks are available:
Task | Does |
---|---|
js |
Transpiles and minifies the main JS file |
css |
Compiles & minifies the main Sass stylesheet |
build |
Runs the js and css tasks |
watch |
Watches for changes to files in src/ , then runs the appropriate task |
comb |
Runs csscomb on any Sass files in src/ |
You can run these tasks by installing gulp
(npm i -g gulp
) then running:
$ gulp $TASKNAME # e.g. gulp build or gulp watch
Leipzig.js uses a tape
-based testing system.
To run the complete test suite, you'll first need to have browserify
and tape-run
installed globally:
$ npm i -g browserify tape-run
You can then run the complete test suite using:
$ npm test
Both Kevin McGowan and James Tauber describe methods for styling interlinear glosses using pure CSS. McGowan also hints at a JavaScript solution that seems similar to what Leipzig.js is doing, but no code is provided.
interlinear
, like Leipzig.js, is a
JavaScript + CSS utility that automatically formats selected HTML elements.
interlinear
has a different feature set than Leipzig.js, and uses a different
syntax for marking up glosses. If Leipzig.js is not to your liking, I recommend
taking a look at interlinear
.
glosser
is a small utility for
producing interlinear glosses in plaintext or formatted for reddit.
For more information about interlinear glossing, visit the homepage for the Leipzig Glossing Rules (from which Leipzig.js gets its name). The Leipzig Glossing rules homepage also contains references to other important works on interlinear glossing.
Leipzig.js is licensed under the ISC License.
For details, please see the LICENSE
file.