One of the differences between a dictionary and other kinds of (scientific) texts resides in the fact that a dictionary is structured both to a high degree and in a uniform way. Dictionary making is less of a creative than of a diligent and, sometimes, stubborn and tiring activity. The classical motto for composition, variatio delectat, is absolutely inappropriate in lexicography.
A dictionary is consistent to the extent that
Inconsistency implies that part of the information given is wrong or misleading and that the user is hindered, rather than helped, in orienting himself in the vocabulary.
The following are aspects of consistency among the components:
Structural analogy relates to aspects such as the following:
The computer is an invaluable aid in securing consistency. The more of all the procedures involved are automatized, the more one may be certain that their result will be consistent. To give a trivial example: In the printed dictionary, the grammatical category of each lemma is to be typed in italics. If one were to apply this font modification manually to the grammatical information entered in the corresponding database field, one would be liable to make mistakes. The proper method is not to do this manually and instead to add the italics automatically to the content of this field in the moment that it is exported to a print file.
As already mentioned, an important tool in securing consistency in the form of the content of a certain field is the range set.
A proved technique of securing consistency in the microstructure and the content of the fields is the following: