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Authoring vs Compose - What's the difference?

authoring | compose |

As verbs the difference between authoring and compose

is that authoring is while compose is .

As nouns the difference between authoring and compose

is that authoring is the process of creating the content of a document or other content item, ie, writing or composition while compose is compound.

authoring

English

Verb

(head)
  • Noun

    (en noun)
  • The process of creating the content of a document or other content item, i.e., writing or composition.
  • The result of this process; a writing or composition.
  • Usage notes

    The sense of the process of composition is very common in computing and multimedia. Also often in attribution: an authoring tool, i.e. a tool used for authoring.

    Derived terms

    * authoring program * authoring tool * authorware

    Quotations

    * 1995, Hazel Henderson, Paradigms in Progress [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=dTtNWLrJwLkC&pg=PA284&lpg=PA284&sig=LHz7mqSKxi3XJlxr8xOJGgNgx80] *: Hence our readings and subsequent authorings tend to be partial and one sided, [...] * 1999, Edward W Soja, Postmetropolis [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=mnbrMlu8fSoC&pg=PA364&lpg=PA364&sig=gfuzuQ2b2i2LgPhcpHT9sboZJnI] *: While these authorings have not gone uncontested, unopposed, unresisted, they have been hegemonic. * 2003, A. Robert Lee, Multicultural American Literature [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=OYYibd5CLsIC&pg=RA2-PA128&lpg=RA2-PA128&sig=KIAgJsXr8HH5EXbPS8EZEKLBpls] *: English-language authorings offer a complement. * 2004, Lee Purcell, Making DVDs [http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&id=buW9PzGfseMC&pg=PA123&lpg=PA123&sig=FDBJ9d_a66ruKbqMYo82nCCsqG8] *: The DVD authoring' in this process relies on providing a digital master of the video and a time-coded VHS cassette to the person handling the ' authoring.

    compose

    English

    (Composition)

    Verb

    (compos)
  • To make something by merging parts.
  • The editor composed a historical journal from many individual letters.
    Try to compose your thoughts.
  • * Bishop Sprat
  • Zeal ought to be composed of the highest degrees of all pious affection.
  • To make up the whole; to constitute.
  • A church is composed of its members.
  • * I. Watts
  • A few useful things compose their intellectual possessions.
  • (nonstandard) To comprise.
  • (transitive, or, intransitive) To construct by mental labor; to think up; particularly, to produce or create a literary or musical work.
  • The orator composed his speech over the week prior.
    Nine numbered symphonies, including the Fifth, were composed by Beethoven.
    It's difficult to compose without absolute silence.
  • * Alexander Pope
  • Let me compose / Something in verse as well as prose.
  • * B. R. Haydon
  • the genius that composed such works as the "Standard" and "Last Supper"
  • (sometimes, reflexive) To calm; to free from agitation.
  • The defendant couldn't compose herself and was found in contempt.
  • * Dryden
  • Compose thy mind; / Nor frauds are here contrived, nor force designed.
  • To arrange the elements of a photograph or other picture.
  • To settle (an argument, dispute etc.); to come to a settlement.
  • * 2010 , (Christopher Hitchens), Hitch-22 , Atlantic 2011, p. 280:
  • By trying his best to compose matters with the mullahs, he had sincerely shown that he did not seek a violent collision
  • To arrange in proper form; to reduce to order; to put in proper state or condition.
  • * Dryden
  • In a peaceful grave my corpse compose .
  • * Milton
  • How in safety best we may / Compose our present evils.
  • (printing, dated) To arrange (types) in a composing stick for printing; to typeset.
  • Derived terms

    * composer * composite * composing stick * composition * compositor * composure * decompose