From 59c4536d5e946518b4c2fb1595f89fbc6601dcec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: aarne Demonstrative Expressions and Multimodal Grammars
Author: Aarne Ranta <aarne (at) cs.chalmers.se>
-Last update: Sun Jan 8 21:50:32 2006
+Last update: Mon Jan 9 20:29:45 2006
-In the beginning, we believed resource grammars are all that +When starting to develop resource grammars, we believed they +would be all that an application grammarian needs to write a concrete syntax. -However, experience has shown that it can be heavy to start -the grammar development in this way: selecting functions from +However, experience has shown that it can be tough to start +grammar development in this way: selecting functions from a resource API requires more abstract thinking than just -writing things (maybe even in a context-free grammar notation, -also supported by GF). This experience has led to the following -steps for grammar development, which, while permitting -a quick start of the work, towards the end increase abstraction -to localize the grammar in different languages. +writing strings, and its take longer to reach testable +results. The most light-weight format is +maybe to start with context-free grammars (which notation is +also supported by GF). Context-free grammars that +give acceptable even though over-generating +results for languages like English are quick to produce. +
++The experience has led to the following +steps for grammar development. While giving the work +a quick start, this recipe +increases abstraction at a later level, when it is time to +to localize the grammar to different languages. +If context-free notation is used, steps 1 and 2 can +be merged.
Domain.
DomainRough.
- This can be oversimplified and overgenerating.
-DomainI.
-DomainI.
+ This can helped by example-based grammar writing, where
+ the examples are generated from DomainRough.
+DomainI to different languages,
+ and test the results by generating linearizations.
+