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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<?xml-model href="http://www.tei-c.org/release/xml/tei/custom/schema/relaxng/tei_all.rng" type="application/xml" schematypens="http://relaxng.org/ns/structure/1.0"?>
<?xml-model href="http://www.tei-c.org/release/xml/tei/custom/schema/relaxng/tei_all.rng" type="application/xml"
schematypens="http://purl.oclc.org/dsdl/schematron"?>
<?xml-stylesheet type="text/xsl" href="tei2django.xsl"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:cc="http://web.resource.org/cc/"
xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title level="s" n="125">Studies</title>
<title type="main">Der ewige Testband</title>
<title type="sub">Experimentell</title>
<author xml:id="viaf_316773348" key="eoa_99">Klaus Thoden</author>
<editor role="submitter">NN</editor>
<editor role="publicationmanager">Lindy Divarci</editor>
<editor role="editorialcoordinator">NN</editor>
<editor role="copyeditor">Myself</editor>
</titleStmt>
<extent>
<measure unit="pages" quantity="596"/>
<measure unit="EUR" quantity="31.90"/>
</extent>
<publicationStmt>
<publisher>Edition Open Access</publisher>
<distributor xml:base="http://www.book-on-demand.de/shop/"
xml:id="id_14971">pro-business.com</distributor>
<date when="2016-08-04">2016-08-04</date>
<idno type="ISBN">978-3-945561-XXX</idno>
<idno type="doi">DOI</idno>
<!-- still missing: suggestedcitation -->
<availability>
<!-- <cc:License rdf:about="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/"/>-->
<licence>by-nc-sa</licence>
</availability>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<ab type="BriefDescription">Klein anfangen.</ab>
<ab type="DetailedDescription">Groß enden.</ab>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<textClass>
<keywords>
<list>
<item>MPRL</item>
<item>Edition Open Access</item>
</list>
</keywords>
</textClass>
<langUsage>
<language ident="de">Deutsch</language>
</langUsage>
</profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<front>
<figure type="cover">
<!-- the cover image -->
<graphic url="Cover.jpg"/>
<head>
Chemical Laboratory. This idealized laboratory with metallurgical furnaces is from William Lewis, <hi rend="italic">Commercium Philosophico-Technicum</hi> (London, 1756). Courtesy of Smith Image Collection, Van Pelt Dietrich Library, University of Pennsylvania.</head>
</figure>
<!-- First page of frontmatter contains Title and subtitle -->
<!-- Second page of frontmatter -->
<div type="eoa_information">
<head>Max Planck Research Library for the History and Development of Knowledge</head>
<div type="series_editors">
<head>Series Editors</head>
<p>Ian T. Baldwin, Gerd Graßhoff, Jürgen Renn, Dagmar Schäfer, Robert Schlögl, Bernard F. Schutz</p>
</div>
<div type="eoa_dev_team">
<head>Edition Open Access Development Team</head>
<p>Lindy Divarci, Bendix Düker, Samuel Gfrörer, Klaus Thoden, Dirk Wintergrün.</p>
</div>
<div type="eoa_info">
<p>
The Edition Open Access (EOA) platform was founded to bring together publication initiatives seeking to disseminate the results of scholarly work in a format that combines traditional publications with the digital medium. It currently hosts the open-access publications of the “Max Planck Research Library for the History and Development of Knowledge” (MPRL) and “Edition Open Sources” (EOS). EOA is open to host other open access initiatives similar in conception and spirit, in accordance with the Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the sciences and humanities, which was launched by the Max Planck Society in 2003.
</p>
<p>
By combining the advantages of traditional publications and the digital medium, the platform offers a new way of publishing research and of studying historical topics or current issues in relation to primary materials that are otherwise not easily available. The volumes are available both as printed books and as online open access publications. They are directed at scholars and students of various disciplines, and at a broader public interested in how science shapes our world.
</p>
</div>
</div>
<!-- Third page of frontmatter contains Title, Subtitle, Authors, Series and Number -->
<!-- Fourth page of frontmatter: colophon and additional credits -->
<!-- Fifth page of frontmatter -->
<div type="mprl_information">
<head>Max Planck Research Library for the History and Development of Knowledge</head>
<p>
The Max Planck Research Library for the History and Development of Knowledge comprises the subseries, Studies, Proceedings and Textbooks. They present original scientific work submitted under the scholarly responsibility of members of the Scientific Board and their academic peers. The initiative is currently supported by research departments of three Max Planck Institutes: the MPI for the History of Science, the Fritz Haber Institute of the MPG and the MPI for Gravitational Physics (Albert Einstein Institute). The publications of the Studies series are dedicated to key subjects in the history and development of knowledge, bringing together perspectives from different fields and combining source-based empirical research with theoretically guided approaches. The Proceedings series presents the results of scientific meetings on current issues and supports, at the same time, further cooperation on these issues by offering an electronic platform with further resources and the possibility for comments and interactions.
</p>
</div>
<div type="scientific_board">
<head>Scientific Board</head>
<p>
Markus Antonietti, Antonio Becchi, Fabio Bevilacqua, William G. Boltz, Jens Braarvik, Horst Bredekamp, Jed Z. Buchwald, Olivier Darrigol, Thomas Duve, Mike Edmunds, Fynn Ole Engler, Robert K. Englund, Mordechai Feingold, Rivka Feldhay, Gideon Freudenthal, Paolo Galluzzi, Kostas Gavroglu, Mark Geller, Domenico Giulini, Günther Görz, Gerd Graßhoff, James Hough, Manfred Laubichler, Glenn Most, Klaus Müllen, Pier Daniele Napolitani, Alessandro Nova, Hermann Parzinger, Dan Potts, Sabine Schmidtke, Circe Silva da Silva, Ana Simões, Dieter Stein, Richard Stephenson, Mark Stitt, Noel M. Swerdlow, Liba Taub, Martin Vingron, Scott Walter, Norton Wise, Gerhard Wolf, Rüdiger Wolfrum, Gereon Wolters, Zhang Baichun.
</p>
</div>
</front>
<!-- replicating the things from the sample project -->
<body>
<div type="part" n="1" xml:id="part1">
<head>This is the first part</head>
<!-- \EOApart{This is the first part} -->
<!-- \EOAchapter{Document structure}{Document structure} -->
<div type="chapter" n="1" xml:id="chap1">
<head>Document structure</head>
<!-- % \EOAlabel sets a label being used for cross references -->
<div type="section" n="1" xml:id="sec11">
<head>This is the first section</head>
<p>This the first section of a text. It is preceded by two hierarchical
units, namely Part and Chapter. As you can see above, the chapter
command has two arguments, the first one being the running head which
is displayed in the header of each page, the second being the text
that is printed on the page where the chapter begins.</p>
<p>We offer two additional units below the section: the subsection and
the subsubsection. See below how they are displayed!</p>
<!-- \EOAsubsection starts a new and numbered section -->
<div type="subsection" n="1" xml:id="subsec111">
<head>This is a subsection</head>
<p>Here we are at an even lower hierarchical level. This can be quite
useful. Be aware that this level is not being displayed in the table
of contents. Now, there is still one level below that: the subsubsection.</p>
<!-- \EOAsubsection starts a new and numbered section -->
<div type="subsubsection" n="1" xml:id="subsubsec1111">
<head>A subsubsection</head>
<p>A subsubsection will never be numbered and like its predecessor, it
will not show up in the table of contents.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- \EOAchapternonumber{Unnumbered document structure}{Unnumbered document structure} -->
<div type="chapter" n="2" rend="nonumber" xml:id="chap2nn">
<head>Unnumbered document structure</head>
<p>Chapter, section and subsection can also be used without numbers. Do
you see the slight changes in the layout? Also, the counter is not
incremented. What should we use this for?</p>
<p>How can we see if the next two are section or subsection? They have
the same height. What shall we do??</p>
<div type="section" n="1" rend="nonumber" xml:id="sec21nn">
<head>Section without numbers</head>
<p>This the first section of a text. It is preceded by two hierarchical
units, namely Part and Chapter. As you can see above, the chapter
command has two arguments, the first one being the running head which
is displayed in the header of each page. Structure your text wisely.</p>
<p>Now, a running head only makes sense if your chapter spreads across
several pages.</p>
<div type="subsection" n="1" rend="nonumber" xml:id="subsec211nn">
<head>Subsection without number</head>
<!-- \EOAsubsectionnonumber{} -->
<p>Here we are at an even lower hierarchical level. This can be quite
useful. Be aware that this level is not being displayed in the table
of contents.</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- \EOAchapter{Markup}{Markup} -->
<div type="chapter" n="3" xml:id="chap3">
<head>Markup</head>
<p>The EOA flavour of Latex offers quite a few commands that help you
markup words in your text. And also, if you want to include words in
different writing systems, they have to be preceded by commands so
that the system can switch to the correct font. The whole scope is
gathered in the next, rather experimental section.</p>
<div type="section" n="1" xml:id="sec31">
<head>Non-Latin alphabets</head>
<p>This section showcases text written in writing systems other than
Latin. It includes Russian, Chinese, Hebrew and Greek.</p>
<div type="subsection" n="1" xml:id="subsec311">
<head>Russian</head>
<!-- \EOArussian -->
<p>First, Russian: <foreign xml:lang="ru">В начале двадцатого века был
одним из идеологов богостроительства, в 1909 году помогал участникам
этого течения содержать фракционную школу на острове Капри для
рабочих, которую В. И. Ленин называл "литераторским центром
богостроительства".</foreign></p>
</div>
<div type="subsection" n="2" xml:id="subsec312">
<head>Chinese</head>
<!-- \EOAchinese -->
<p>Next, Chinese: <foreign xml:lang="zh">法兰克人接受了高卢罗马文化,
改操罗曼语族语言(但在罗马人分布较少的高卢北部人多操日耳曼语族语言)。
克洛维定巴黎为首都,建立了新的王朝,史称墨洛温王朝,但是这个王朝在克
洛维死后陷入分裂,克洛维的四个儿子按照法兰克人的习惯,将法兰克国家一
分为四,分别是巴黎、奥尔良、苏瓦松和兰斯。</foreign></p>
</div>
<div type="subsection" n="3" xml:id="subsec313">
<head>Hebrew</head>
<!-- \EOAhebrew -->
<p>Then, Hebrew:<foreign xml:lang="he">ארגינעל האט די סעקרעטאריאט שטאב געדארפט צו זיין א
פאראייניגטע גרופע פון אומפארטייאישע שליחים פון יעדע לאנד וועלכע האבן
נאר די אינטערעסן פון זייערע אייגענע לענדער אבער עס האט זיך קיינמאל
נישט געהעריג אויסגעארבעט און נאר דער סעקרעטאר גענעראל איז אזוי
באטראכט געווארן</foreign></p>
</div>
<div type="subsection" n="4" xml:id="subsec314">
<head>Greek</head>
<!-- \EOAgreek -->
<p>And finally Greek: <foreign xml:lang="el">Ο φλοιός κυμαίνεται μεταξύ 5
και 70 km σε βάθος. Τα λεπτά τμήματα του φλοιού είναι κάτω από τους
ωκεανούς (ωκεάνιος φλοιός) και αποτελούνται από πυκνά πετρώματα
μαγνησίου, σιδήρου και πυριτίου. Τα παχύτερα τμήματα του φλοιού
είναι τα ηπειρωτικά τα οποία είναι λιγότερο πυκνά από τα ωκεάνια και
αποτελούνται από πετρώματα πλούσια σε νάτριο, αλουμίνιο και
πυρίτιο.</foreign></p>
</div>
<div type="subsection" n="5" xml:id="subsec315">
<head>If in doubt</head>
<!-- \EOAinline -->
<p>You can add complicated characters as images, for example,
an apple: <graphic url="inline/A.jpg"
mimeType="image/jpg"/>.</p>
</div>
</div>
<div type="section" n="2" xml:id="sec32">
<head>Text markup</head>
<!-- \EOAemph, \EOAup, \EOAdown, \EOAbold -->
<p>This is a regular paragraph. Words can appear in italics, –
<hi rend="italic">these are examples of this</hi> – and some characters are
superscript or subscript. <hi rend="sup">A high pitched voice</hi> called and
<hi rend="sub">a deep resonating bass</hi> answered. What is the
<!-- \EOAmathfont -->
<hi rend="math">Math font good for?</hi> Be careful and use
<hi rend="bold">EOAbold</hi> only sparingly.</p>
<!-- %% Multilingualism -->
<p>To read single Arabic words, as in
Grammaticall Paradigms, we must know the sound of the letters
[…] ‘b t <foreign xml:lang="el">θ 3</foreign> <foreign
xml:lang="he">כ ח</foreign> L m n w h y.\EOAup{change of
\EOAhebrew{יה} into \EOAhebrew{ח}} place of the accent [\dots]
never in ultima, therefore in penultima in all disyllables as
onsur, never higher than the antepenult, and there always in
polysyllables as nasara, nasarta unlwaaw [y]e penult be made
long by quiescent by אוי as tansoranias tansoriיna
tansoraיna<note place="bottom">Add., f.1r.</note></p>
<p>Another paragraph showcasing some additional text marking features.
<!-- \EOAst, \EOAls, \EOAcaps, \EOAurl -->
Text can be <hi rend="struck">struck through</hi>. And we can
<hi rend="spaced">space out</hi> some words. But <hi
rend="smallcaps">small caps I know pretty well</hi>. Last, but
not least, here is the way to enter web addresses: <ref target="http://www.edition-open-access.de">http://www.edition-open-access.de</ref>
</p>
<!-- \hyperref[sec2:image1]{\includegraphics[height=0.85em,keepaspectratio]{inline/A.jpg}} -->
<p>A short check on how hyperref works: <ref target="#sec2image1">
<!-- fehlt noch -->
<graphic url="inline/A.jpg"/></ref>
<!-- \href{http://www.tex.stackexchange.com}{\includegraphics{inline/A.jpg}} -->
<!-- @scale means relative to textwidth or something -->
<ref target="http://www.tex.stackexchange.com"><graphic scale="70" url="inline/A.jpg"/></ref>
</p>
</div>
<div type="section" n="3" xml:id="sec33">
<head>Other types of text blocks</head>
<!-- \EOAciteauthoryear{} -->
<p>If you want to include a longer quote in a text, there is of course a
command for that. And inside that we also introduce you to how you can
insert footnotes.Piaget 1985<ptr type="bibliog" target="#Piaget_1985"/>.</p>
<!-- \begin{EOAquote} \end{EOAquote}-->
<q>Do you like the lorem ipsum text? I don't.<note
place="bottom">Kaulbach 1960, 320-322<ptr type="bibliog"
target="#Kaulbach_1960"/></note>. Klar, man kann damit Seite
um Seite füllen, aber wenn die Leserin entsprechend geneigt
ist, will sie gelesenen Text auch lesen und verstehen
können. Und da hörts dabei einfach auf!</q>
<!--
% Testing out the footnote feature of Oklahoma\EOAfnalph{Satisfaction}. This will of course produce an error, because we
% already have the other stuff.\EOAfnarabic{Let's see what happens.}
% This is exciting!
-->
<div type="subsection" n="1" rend="nonumber" xml:id="subsec331">
<head>Three constructs for lists</head>
<p>This is a numbered list containing three items <!-- \begin{EOAlist} \end{EOAlist}-->
<list type="ordered">
<item>This is the first entry.</item>
<item>This is the second entry.</item>
<item>This is the third entry</item>
</list>
</p>
<p>In contrast to that, here is a list that is not numbered, but also contains the same
items! </p>
<p>
<list type="bulleted">
<item>This is the first entry.</item>
<item>This is the second entry.</item>
<item>This is the third entry</item>
</list>
</p>
<p>Thirdly, if you want to give some definitions you can use EOAdescription:
<!-- \begin{EOAdescription} \end{EOAdescription} -->
<list type="gloss">
<label>LaTeX</label>
<item>A typesetting system</item>
<label>User</label>
<item>This is you!</item>
</list>
</p>
</div>
</div>
<div type="section" n="4" xml:id="sec34">
<head>Smaller spacings</head>
<p>Small spacings are also there: U\,S\;A\EOAindexlocation{USofA}.</p>
</div>
<div type="section" n="5" xml:id="sec35">
<head>Some technical matters</head>
<p>Some letters cannot be typed directly when writing in LaTeX. For
example the tilde: \EOAtilde. We have to use a command for that. Also,
of course, as you have already seen, you cannot write the percent sign
as it is, because this is used for commentig. Use \% instead. And for
a backslash? \\? No. That's a newline. \textbackslash!</p>
</div>
</div>
<div type="chapter" n="4" xml:id="chap4">
<head>References and indices</head>
<!-- \EOAchapter{References and indices}{References and indices} -->
<p>Elements can be assigned labels so that we can later refer to them:
sections, images, tables. A lot of things can be cross-referened.</p>
<!-- \EOAindexperson{James Joyce} \EOAindexlocation{Zürich} -->
<p>By the way, Joyce<index indexName="Person"><term>James
Joyce</term></index> is a darn good author. Read some of his
stuff. It may be useful for indexing some of your key terms in
the text so that we can later link to catalogues that tells
the reader more about the things. Joyce died in Zurich<index
indexName="Location"><term>Zürich</term></index>. You cannot
read anything about him in neither Walkowski 2016<ptr
type="bibliog" target="#walkowski_digital_2016"/> or Carvalho
2012<ptr type="bibliog" target="#Carvalho2012"/>!
</p>
<!-- \EOAindexperson{Cavendish, Charles 2@Cavendish, Lord
Charles (son of the second duke of Devonshire),
(Fig.~\EOAref{sec2:image1},
\EOApageref{sec2:image1})!duty of service}. -->
<p>Now, here's a funny problem concerning the index. Consider
one Lord Charles<index indexName="Person"><term
sortKey="CavendishCharles2"> Cavendish, Lord Charles (son
of the second duke of Devonshire), (Fig.
<!-- \EOApageref{sec2:image1} -->
<ref target="#sec2:image1"/>, <ref type="page"
target="#sec2:image1"/>)
</term>
<index>
<term>
duty of service
</term>
</index>
</index>
We actually have references in there. Can we do this? This is the
reference outside the index: (Fig.
<!-- \EOApageref{sec2:image1} -->
<ref target="#sec2:image1"/>, <ref type="page"
target="#sec2:image1"/>)</p>
<p>This paragraph illustrates various references (see section <ref
target="sec1"/>). It includes a reference to the image (see image
<ref target="sec2:image2"/>), two entries for the index (Science
<index><term>Science</term></index> and
<!-- \EOAindex{Konfuzius@\EOAchinese{孔夫子}} -->
Confucius<index><term sortKey="Konfuzius"><foreign xml:lang="zh">
孔夫子</foreign></term></index>), one reference to a facsimile
(see facsimile on page <ref type="page" target="#Facsimile1"/>)
and one reference to a section. The last one is at the beginning.
And of course: references to the bibliography: Gert 2011 [2002], 128<ptr type="bibliog" target="#Gert2011"/>
<!-- \EOAcitenumeric[128]{Gert2011} -->
. We can also cite manually with Plat. tim.<ptr type="bibliog" target="#Asper_2009"/>
<!-- \EOAcitemanual[Plat. tim.]{Asper_2009} -->
.
<!-- %%\EOAindex{Sogenannt@»Sogenannt«} --></p>
</div>
<div type="chapter" n="5" xml:id="chap5">
<head>Floating environments</head> <head
type="short">Floats</head>
<!-- \EOAchapter{Floats}{Floating environments} -->
<p>Floating Gamba and Andersen
2008<ptr type="bibliog" target="#Gamba_2008"/> environments
are bigger constructs like figures and tables. If you want to,
you can leave the placing of them to the typesetting system,
in order to avoid bigger stretches Hsu 1993<ptr type="bibliog"
target="#Hsu_1993"/> of white space.</p>
<div type="section" n="1" xml:id="numsec3-1">
<head>Tables</head>
<p>The following lines of code produce a table consisting of 4 columns
and 3 rows. Is the table right so?</p>
<!--
\begin{EOAtable}{L{2.3cm}L{2.3cm}L{2.3cm}L{2.3cm}}
{This is a table}{sec3:table1}{H}
\EOAtablehead{Heading 1 & Heading 2 & Heading 3
& Heading 4}
Here & you & may & find \\
some & data & spread & over\\
the & table & in & cells\\
\end{EOAtable}
-->
<table rows="4" cols="4" xml:id="sec3table1">
<head>This is a table</head>
<row role="label">
<cell role="data">Heading 1</cell>
<cell role="data">Heading 2</cell>
<cell role="data">Heading 3</cell>
<cell role="data">Heading 4</cell>
</row>
<row role="data">
<cell role="data">Here</cell>
<cell role="data">you</cell>
<cell role="data">may</cell>
<cell role="data">find</cell>
</row>
<row role="data">
<cell role="data">some</cell>
<cell role="data">data</cell>
<cell role="data">spread</cell>
<cell role="data">over</cell>
</row>
<row role="data">
<cell role="data">the</cell>
<cell role="data">table</cell>
<cell role="data">in</cell>
<cell role="data">cells</cell>
</row>
</table>
</div>
<div type="section" n="2" xml:id="numsec3-2">
<head>Figures</head>
<p>Yet another section. We have an image here. The command takes five
parameters: filename, caption, label, width and position</p>
<!-- \EOAfigure{images/1.jpg}{An image with a caption. It
resembles a bird looking at you. Doesn't it? And do you
think it looks angry?}{sec2:image1}{66}{H} -->
<figure xml:id="sec2image1">
<graphic url="images/1.jpg"/>
<head>An image with a caption. It resembles a bird looking at you. Doesn't it? And do you think it looks angry?</head>
</figure>
<figure xml:id="sec2image2">
<graphic url="images/1.jpg"/>
<head>Ostafrikanische Arbeiter an einem der großen Knochengräben, die während der paläontologischen Expedition des Berliner Naturkundemuseums in die damalige Kolonie Deutsch-Ostafrika zwischen 1909 und 1913 angelegt wurden. (Koloriertes Glasdiapositiv, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Historische Bild- u. Schriftgutsammlungen, Bestand: Pal. Mus., Signatur: B V/177)</head>
</figure>
<!-- \EOAfigure{images/1.jpg}{Ostafrikanische Arbeiter an einem der großen Knochengräben, die während der paläontologischen Expedition des Berliner Naturkundemuseums in die damalige Kolonie Deutsch-Ostafrika zwischen 1909 und 1913 angelegt wurden. (Koloriertes Glasdiapositiv, Museum für Naturkunde Berlin, Historische Bild- u. Schriftgutsammlungen, Bestand: Pal. Mus., Signatur: B V/177)}{sec2:image1a}{66}{H} -->
<p>The fat-free version of this is EOAfigurenonumber which does without a
caption and a label. We are using the same source image here, but by
specifying the size of the image, it will scale down accordingly.</p>
<!-- \EOAfigurenonumber{images/1.jpg}{33}{H} -->
<figure xml:id="sec2image3" rend="nonumber">
<graphic url="images/1.jpg"/>
</figure>
<!-- \EOAlsfigure{images/1.jpg}{That's a caption for the lovely landscape image}{sec2:lsimage2} -->
<p>The last image command – EOAlsfigure – takes three parameters the figure covers the whole page</p>
<figure xml:id="sec2lsimage2-2" rend="landscape">
<graphic url="images/1.jpg"/>
<head>That's a caption for the lovely landscape image</head>
</figure>
</div>
</div>
<div type="chapter" n="6" xml:id="chap6">
<head>Mathematics</head>
<!-- \EOAchapter{Mathematics}{Mathematics} -->
<!-- %% in silence: a new theorem, we'll use it later \EOAnewtheorem{theorem1}{Theorem} -->
<!-- \EOAineq -->
<p>Let's have some mathematics examples here. Latex is very good in
typesetting formulæ, so let's go for it! We already had this example,
but here is another inline equation <formula rend="inline" notation="TeX">$\sqrt{9} = 3$</formula>. Well, our
root symbol expands the line spacing a bit, so maybe we should not use
it inline. Here is another equation: <formula rend="inline" notation="TeX">$2^2 = 4$</formula>.</p>
<p>Instead, an equation outside of a paragraph.</p>
<p><formula rend="block" notation="TeX" xml:id="LabelOfThisEquation">
$6 + 6 = 12$
</formula></p>
<!--
\begin{EOAequation}{LabelOfThisEquation}
6 + 6 = 12
\end{EOAequation}
-->
<p><formula rend="block" notation="TeX" xml:id="AnotherLabelOfThisEquation">
$g_{\mu \nu} = 7$
</formula></p>
<!--
\begin{EOAequation}{AnotherLabelOfThisEquation}
g_{\mu \nu} = 7
\end{EOAequation}
-->
<p>And if it does not need to be numbered. They also don't take labels (why?).</p>
<p><formula rend="block nonumber" notation="TeX">
$6 + 6 = 12$
</formula></p>
<!--
\begin{EOAequationnonumber}
6 + 6 = 12
\end{EOAequationnonumber}
-->
<p><formula rend="block subequations" notation="TeX" xml:id="subequations1">
$6 + 6 = 12\\
12 + 12 = 24\\
24 + 24 = 48$
</formula></p>
<!--
\begin{EOAsubequations}{subequations1}
When you have some equations that belong somehow together.
\begin{align}
6 + 6 = 12\\
12 + 12 = 24\\
24 + 24 = 48
\end{align}
\end{EOAsubequations}
-->
<!--
\begin{theorem1}
Environment for the theorem we defined above.
\end{theorem1}
-->
<p>An array of equations. All of them numbered individually.</p>
<p><formula rend="block array" notation="TeX" xml:id="LabelOfArray">
$1 + 1 = 2\\
2 + 2 = 4\\
4 + 4 = 8$
</formula></p>
<!--
\begin{EOAequationarray}{LabelOfArray}
1 + 1 = 2\\
2 + 2 = 4\\
4 + 4 = 8
\end{EOAequationarray}-->
<p>Again, an array of equations without numbers. They don't get labels, either.</p>
<p><formula rend="block array nonumber" notation="TeX" xml:id="LabelOfNonumberArray">
$1 + 1 = 2\\
2 + 2 = 4\\
4 + 4 = 8$
</formula></p>
<!--
\begin{EOAequationarraynonumber}
1 + 1 = 2\\
2 + 2 = 4\\
4 + 4 = 8
\end{EOAequationarraynonumber}
-->
<p>Let's insert an empty page here.</p>
<!-- \EOAemptypage -->
</div>
<div type="chapter" n="7" xml:id="chap7">
<head>Transcription and translation</head>
<!-- \EOAchapter{Transcription and translation}{Transcription and translation} -->
<!--
% For a transcription and translation EOAtranscripted may be used.
% This command always starts on a left page
\begin{EOAtranscripted}{Libro Primo, 6v}{First Book, 6v}
Delirant isti romani!
\EOAnewpage
Die spinnen, die Römer!
\end{EOAtranscripted}
%% this command adds an entry into the table of contents
\EOAtocentry{A letter}
Starting all over. We can also cite newspapers: \EOAciteauthoryear{wenk_riesenschweinerei_????}
\EOAletterhead{With love from me to you, 1963/04/11}{Call number R 5015}{writing style}{number of pages}
Dear Paul\EOAindexperson{Paul McCartney}.
With love, from me to you.
Cheers, John\EOAindexperson{John Lennon}
A complement to the empty page is …
\EOAnewpage
The new page command. This starts a new page, but obviously without a
blank page in between.-->
</div>
<div type="chapter" n="8" xml:id="chap8">
<head>Bibliography</head>
<!-- \EOAchapternonumber{Bibliography}{Bibliography} -->
<!-- \EOAprintbibliography -->
</div>
<!-- \EOAprintindex -->
<!-- \EOAtocentry{Person index} -->
<!-- \EOAprintpersonindex -->
<!-- \EOAtocentry{Location index} -->
<!-- \EOAprintlocationindex -->
</div>
</body>
</text>
</TEI>