$Revision: 1.3 $
$Date: 2002/06/11 01:19:51 $
bibliorelation — The relationship of a document to another
bibliorelation ::= (#PCDATA|link|olink|ulink|emphasis|trademark|replaceable|remark| subscript|superscript|inlinegraphic|inlinemediaobject|indexterm)*
Name | Type | Default | ||||||||||||||
othertype | CDATA | None | ||||||||||||||
otherclass | CDATA | None | ||||||||||||||
type |
| None | ||||||||||||||
class |
| None |
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
Additional attributes: (Required attributes, if any, are bold)
The bibliorelation element satisfies the relation element of the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative.
The Dublin Core defines relation as “a reference to a related resource.” It goes on to note that “recommended best practice is to reference the resource by means of a string or number conforming to a formal identification system.”
DocBook 4.2 added bibliocoverage, bibliorelation, and bibliosource to make the DocBook meta-information wrappers a complete superset of the Dublin Core.
These elements contain bibliorelation: appendixinfo, articleinfo, biblioentry, bibliographyinfo, bibliomixed, bibliomset, biblioset, blockinfo, bookinfo, chapterinfo, glossaryinfo, indexinfo, objectinfo, partinfo, prefaceinfo, refentryinfo, referenceinfo, refsect1info, refsect2info, refsect3info, refsectioninfo, refsynopsisdivinfo, sect1info, sect2info, sect3info, sect4info, sect5info, sectioninfo, setindexinfo, setinfo, sidebarinfo.
The following elements occur in bibliorelation: emphasis, indexterm, inlinegraphic, inlinemediaobject, link, olink, remark, replaceable, subscript, superscript, trademark, ulink.
Identifies the encoding scheme of the identifier.
Identifies the encoding scheme of the identifier when class is other.
Identifies the relationship type of the identifier. See the Dublin Core Qualifiers for details about the relationship types.
Identifies the relationship type of the identifier when type is othertype.