Typographic rules can be trick to enforce in a consistent manner in a
document. In French, typographic rules for dialogues are arguably
worst. ogam
is a domain-specific markup language, intended to free
fiction writers from the pain to enforce typographic rules within
their productions manually.
Additionally, ogam
allows to annotate one’s text with metadata. For
instance, it is possible to indicate what character is speaking a
given line of dialogue. This paves the road towards being able to
discoverability, e.g., finding the list of scenes wherein a given
character speaks.
This is a regular sentence.
<p>This is a regular sentence.</p>
This is a regular sentence.
*This is a sentence with emphasize.*</p>
<p><em>This is a regular sentence.</em></p>
This is a regular sentence.
+This is a sentence with strong emphasize.+</p>
<p><strong>This is a sentence with strong emphasize.</strong></p>
This is a sentence with strong emphasize.
This +is+ a *sentence with +multiple emphasizes+*.
<p>This <strong>is</strong> a <em>sentence with <strong>multiple emphasizes</strong></em>.</p>
This is a sentence with multiple emphasizes.
"This is a +quote+."
<p>“This is a <strong>quote</strong>.”</p>
“This is a quote.”
This +is an "incorrect+" sentence.
<p>This <span class="illformed_inline">+is an "incorrect+" sentence.</span></p>
This +is an "incorrect+"
sentence.
<p>This <span class="illformed_inline">+is an "incorrect+"</span> sentence.</p>
[Hi,| she says.|](Clara)
<p><span class="dialogue by-Clara">“<span class="reply">Hi,</span>” she says.</span></p>
“Hi, she says.
[Hi,| she says.| How are you?](Clara)
<p><span class="dialogue by-Clara">“<span class="reply">Hi,</span> she says. <span class="reply">How are you?</span>”</span></p>
“Hi, she says. How are you?”
[Hi,| she says.| How are you?](Clara) [I'm fine, thanks.]
<p><span class="dialogue by-Clara">“<span class="reply">Hi,</span> she says. <span class="reply">How are you?</span>”</span></p><p><span class="dialogue">“<span class="reply">I’m fine, thanks.</span>”</span></p>
“Hi, she says. How are you?”
“I’m fine, thanks.”
[Hi,| she says.| How are you?](Clara) She was smiling. [I'm fine, thanks.]
<p><span class="dialogue by-Clara">“<span class="reply">Hi,</span> she says. <span class="reply">How are you?</span>”</span> She was smiling. <span class="dialogue">“<span class="reply">I’m fine, thanks.</span>”</span></p>
“Hi, she says. How are you?” She was smiling. “I’m fine, thanks.”
It was a hot day. [Hi!| he said.](Aaron)
His friends smiled.
<div><p>It was a hot day.<span class="illformed_inline">[Hi!| he said.](Aaron)</span> His friends smiled. </p></div>
It was a hot day.[Hi!| he said.](Aaron) His friends smiled.
This is a first paragraph.
This is a second paragraph.
<div><p>This is a first paragraph.</p><p>This is a second paragraph</p>
This is a first paragraph.
This is a second paragraph
[Ceci est une première ligne de dialogue.]
[Ceci est une autre ligne de dialogue.]
<div><p><span class="dialogue">« <span class="reply">Ceci est une première ligne de dialogue.</span></span></p><p><span class="dialogue">— <span class="reply">Ceci est une autre ligne de dialogue.</span></span></p></div>
« Ceci est une première ligne de dialogue.
— Ceci est une autre ligne de dialogue.
A first implementation of an ogam
—ogmarkup
at this time– parser
and compiler has been written in Haskell, and has been published on
hackage (MIT).
This first project has been deprecated in favor of this rewriting in
Rust. Contrary to its predecessor, ogam
is released under the terms
of the MPL 2.0.