Creating and processing electronic texts was one of the earliest areas		of computational activity, and has been going on for at least half a century.		This Guide does not have any pretence to be a comprehensive		introduction to this complex area of digital resource creation, but the authors		have attempted to highlight some of the fundamental issues which will need to		be addressed  particularly by anyone working within the community of		arts and humanities researchers, teachers, and learners, who may never before		have undertaken this kind of work.
 	 Crucially, this Guide will not attempt to offer a		comprehensive (or even a comparative) overview of the available hardware and		software technologies which might form the basis of any electronic text		creation project. This is largely because the development of new hardware and		software continues at such a rapid pace that anything we might review or		recommend here will probably have been superseded by the time this publication		becomes available in printed form. Similarly, there would have been little		point in providing detailed descriptions of how to combine particular encoding		or markup schemes, metadata, and delivery systems, as the needs and abilities		of the creators and (anticipated) users of an electronic text should be the		major factors influencing its design, construction, and method of delivery.
	 Instead, the authors have attempted to identify and discuss the		underlying issues and key concerns, thereby helping readers to begin to develop		their own knowledge and understanding of the whole subject of electronic text		creation and publication. When combined with an intimate knowledge of the		non-electronic source material, readers should be able to decide for themselves		which approach  and thus which combinations of hardware and software,		techniques and design philosophy  will be most appropriate to their		needs and the needs of any other prospective users.
 	 Although every functional aspect of computers is based upon the		distinctive binary divide evidenced between 1's and 0's, true and false,		presence and absence, it is rarely so easy to draw such clear		distinctions at the higher levels of creating and documenting electronic texts.		Therefore, whilst reading this Guide it is important to remember		that there are seldom 'right' or 'wrong' ways to		prepare an electronic text, although certain decisions will crucially affect		the usefulness and likely long-term viability of the final resource. Readers		should not assume that any course of action recommended here will necessarily		be the 'best' approach in any or all given circumstances; however		everything the authors say is based upon our understanding of what constitutes		good practice  and results from almost		twenty-five years of experience running the Oxford Text Archive		(http://ota.ahds.ac.uk).
 	 
1.3: Opening questions  Who will read your text, why, and		how? 	 There are some fundamental questions that will recur throughout this		Guide, and all of them focus upon the intended readership (or		users) of the electronic text that you are hoping to produce. For example, if		your main reason for creating an electronic text is to provide the raw data for		computer-assisted analysis  perhaps as part of an authorship attribution		study  then completeness and accuracy of the data will probably be far		more important than capturing the visual appearance of the source text.		Conversely, if you are hoping to produce an electronic text that will have		broad functionality and appeal, and the original source contains presentational		features which might be considered worthy of note, then you should be		attempting to create a very different object  perhaps one where visual		fidelity is more important than the absolute accuracy of any transcription. In		the former case, the implicit assumption is that no-one is likely to		read the electronic text (data) from start to finish, whilst in the second case		it is more likely that some readers may wish to use the		electronic text as a digital surrogate for the original work. As the nature of		the source(s) and/or the intended resource(s) becomes more complex  for		example recording variant readings of a manuscript or discrepancies between		different editions of the same printed text  the same fundamental		questions remain.
 	 The first chapter of this Guide looks at how you might		start to address some of these questions, by subjecting your source(s) to a		process that the creators of electronic texts have come to call 'Document		Analysis'.