Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
Summer 1998 Edition
How to Acquire our Design and Software for a Dynamic Reference Work
Contents:
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy is a new and innovative kind
of reference work. It has been developed at the Center for the Study
of Language and Information over the past two and a half years (i.e.,
beginning September 1995). During that time, we have been thinking
through the issues and problems that arise in the design of a dynamic
reference work that will meet the highest academic standards. The
Unix software we have developed provides the necessary tools for a
small staff on a small budget to administer a large-scale dynamic
reference work. Our software may therefore meet the needs of: (1)
academic disciplines and institutions (in both the sciences and
humanities), (2) reference work publishers looking to build their own
dynamic reference works, and (3) corporations that need to maintain and
monitor a cooperatively-produced reference work.
The many hours we have spent over the past two and a half years
working on the design (and working out the bugs) of the dynamic
reference work represents a substantial investment of time and money.
It would require a significant sum of money to pay one or more
individuals with Unix, perl, and webmastering experience to design,
implement, and debug a similar system. Moreover, it would take them
time to produce such a system. A simpler, faster, and less expensive
alternative would be to acquire our design and software.
On our design, the reference work lives in two directories: the
Editor's home directory and the webserver's directory. In addition to
the usual email and other correspondence subdirectories, the Editor's
home directory contains special subdirectories for scripts and
databases. The programs and files in these subdirectories
are the key to the automated administration of the reference work.
The webserver directory contains a special htdocs subdirectory
which contains the reference work itself. The reference work includes
a Homepage, Table of Contents, and an entries subdirectory
where the entries are stored (each in it own subdirectory).
We have built Unix and perl scripts that automate the following tasks:
create accounts for the authors (from keyboard input by the Editor),
send the authors email about their account and the ftp commands they
will need, notice when authors place entries online for the first
time, monitor subsequent changes in the content to entries, prompt the
Editor when discreptancies arise among databases, automatically
re-cross-reference the reference work when new entries come online,
modify the email aliases such as `authors' (which contains a list of
the email addresses of all the authors), and notify the board members
that entries for which they are responsible have been changed. These
scripts can be customized to run on virtually any Unix installation
supporting a web server, perl, and elm.
- new-author script: This script will perform the system tasks
necessary to add a new author to the reference work.
- modifications script: This script is run daily and
after discovering which entries have been modified within
the last twenty-four hours, reacts in numerous ways.
- uncomment-links: In the Table of Contents, links to
entries which have been commissioned but are not yet written are
"disabled'. The uncomment-links reports to the Editor about
the status of these links and can activate selected ones.
- database script: This script is a database manager. It
extracts and modifies information in the reference work's databases.
- keyword-ckecker and keyword-linker: These scripts
dynamically cross-reference the Encyclopedia as new entries come
online.
- add-keyword: A utility perl script to introduce new
keywords into the database when new entries are commissioned.
- add-notification: This scripts helps to keep
the members of the Board of Editors informed about which of the
entries under their editorial control have been modified and when.
- backup: Simple backup script used by the Editor when
he or she makes changes to the Encyclopedia entry-directories.
- check-contents: This script verifies that the
information in the Table of Contents matches the information about the
authors in the databases.
- mail-topic: This script mails out to prospective
authors a customized version of the letter of invitation to write on a
specific topic.
- new-board-member: This script updates all the relevant
Encyclopedia databases when a new Board member is added.
- post-edit: This is a shell script that does some
post-editing cleanup after root or the Editor edits an entry.
- send-notifications: This script keeps the members of
the Board of Editors informed about which of the entries under their
editorial control have been modified and when.
- snapshot: This is a shell script that will create a
snapshot of the reference work for archive (not backup) purposes.
These scripts (and a several other "helper" scripts, which have not
been mentioned), make it possible for a small staff on a small budget
to administer a large-scale reference work.
The above programs and scripts can be acquired from the Center for the
Study of Language and Information. The cost of the software varies
according to the kind of the institution making the acquisition. The
price for academic institutions and non-profit organizations is less
than the price for commercial institutions.
In addition, commercial institutions can pay CSLI to send a team to
configure and install a dynamic reference work on a Unix machine
supplied by the purchaser. During the installation, we train your
staff how to operate the reference work software. This service
increases the cost of the software (depending on where the
CSLI team has to travel).
Enquiries should be sent to:
- Edward N. Zalta
zalta@csli.stanford.edu
or to:
- John Perry
john@csli.stanford.edu