I have published a few interlinear texts as part of a grammar. The first version was done in Word, where I used tables. Not the best way, as you have to decide beforehand how many words to place on a line and where to cut off to the next line. With a few macros it was quite manageable: they would put the text in tables, apply the correct fonts, move text to the next line etc. But once the tables had been set up, it wasn’t possible to change the layout without re-dsitributing the text over the lines.
The second version was done in LaTeX. Once I’d taken the (big) hurdle to learn LaTeX and once the interlinear had been set up (in this case this was built into the system created by the publisher), it was very easy to code and export interlinear text. Vernacular text and gloss were automatically lined up, and the text automatically ran neatly until the end of the line.
Paulus+Kieviet
Van: mnjames [mailto:[Email Removed].org]
Verzonden: maandag 3 april 2017 19:30
Aan: [Email Removed]
Onderwerp: [PT Support Site] Publishing an interlinear [Questions]
[Link Removed]
[Link Removed] mnjames
April 3
I mean something created with the interlinearizer. However, I’d still be interested in hearing from anyone who has done a professional-quality publication of any interlinear–how they organized the data and laid it out (hopefully with an automated process and not by hand). I’ve found someone who’s done this using xetex, so that’s likely the route I’ll end up going, but I’m interested in learning from others also if people have other solutions.