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[cgreek:00122] unified reference system



> If what you mean is 'a single reference system embracing all works
> by that author in the TLG', then I doubt that *any* author does.

This is what I meant.

> Another relevant distinction is that in some authors (e.g. Aristotle),
> the canonical edition is continuously paged in one sequence, so that
> e.g. '410a5' is a unique citation (in this case to a passage in
> the De Anima).  But this isn't true of Stephanus pages in Plato, since
> there is more than one volume in the Stephanus edition (though no one
> really uses volume citations).

Does this mean that the triplet <Stephanus page, section, line> is not
a unique citation in the TLG?

If so, Aristotle should be the only author whose works benefit from
inter-work jump. (considering your comment below)

If not, Aristotle and Plato should be the only two authors whose works
benefit from inter-work jump.

> There are also cases of unique citations
> that go across authors, e.g. citing volume (and part), page, and line
> number in the Commentaria in Aristotelem Graeca (but the TLG only records
> page and line for these in the citations, and these aren't unique).

-- 
TAKAHASHI Naoto
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