citetitle
citetitle — The title of a cited work.
Synopsis
- Zero or more of:
- text
- Bibliography inlines
- Error inlines
- Graphic inlines
- GUI inlines
- Indexing inlines
- Keyboard inlines
- Linking inlines
- Markup inlines
- Math inlines
- Object-oriented programming inlines
- Operating system inlines
- Product inlines
- Programming inlines
- Publishing inlines
- Technical inlines
- Ubiquitous inlines
alt
anchor
annotation
biblioref
indexterm
(db.indexterm.endofrange)indexterm
(db.indexterm.singular)indexterm
(db.indexterm.startofrange)inlinemediaobject
link
olink
remark
subscript
superscript
xref
Attributes
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
Additional attributes:
- pubwork (enumeration)
- “article”
- “bbs”
- “book”
- “cdrom”
- “chapter”
- “dvd”
- “emailmessage”
- “gopher”
- “journal”
- “manuscript”
- “newsposting”
- “part”
- “refentry”
- “section”
- “series”
- “set”
- “webpage”
- “wiki”
Description
A citetitle
provides inline markup for the
title of a cited work.
Attributes
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
- pubwork
Identifies the nature of the publication being cited
Enumerated values: “article” An article
“bbs” A bulletin board system
“book” A book
“cdrom” A CD-ROM
“chapter” A chapter (as of a book)
“dvd” A DVD
“emailmessage” An email message
“gopher” A gopher page
“journal” A journal
“manuscript” A manuscript
“newsposting” A posting to a newsgroup
“part” A part (as of a book)
“refentry” A reference entry
“section” A section (as of a book or article)
“series” A series
“set” A set (as of books)
“webpage” A web page
“wiki” A wiki page
This element occurs in 55 elements.
This element contains 100 elements.
See Also
Examples
1 <article xmlns='http://docbook.org/ns/docbook'> 2 <title>Example citetitle</title> 4 <para>For a complete methodology for DTD creation, see <citetitle pubwork="book">Developing SGML DTDs: From Text to Model 6 to Markup</citetitle> by Eve Maler and Jeanne El Andaloussi. </para> 8 </article>
For a complete methodology for DTD creation, see Developing SGML DTDs: From Text to Model to Markup by Eve Maler and Jeanne El Andaloussi.