address

address — A real-world address, generally a postal address.

Synopsis

address ::=

Attributes

Common attributes and common linking attributes.

Additional attributes:

  • All of:
    • continuation (enumeration)
      • “continues”
      • “restarts”
    • linenumbering (enumeration)
      • “numbered”
      • “unnumbered”
    • startinglinenumber (integer)
    • xml:space (enumeration)
      • “preserve”
    • language

Additional Constraints

  • If this element is the root element, it must have a version attribute.

Description

An address is generally a postal address, although it does contain elements for fax and email addresses as well as the catchall otheraddr.

Important

The language attribute will be removed in DocBook V6.0. Use xml:lang instead.

Processing expectations

Formatted as a displayed block. This element is displayed “verbatim”; whitespace and line breaks within this element are significant.

Attributes

Common attributes and common linking attributes.

any attribute

Any attribute in any other explicit namespace

continuation

Determines whether line numbering continues from the previous element or restarts

Enumerated values:
“continues”

Line numbering continues from the immediately preceding element with the same name.

“restarts”

Line numbering restarts (begins at 1, usually).

language

Identifies the language (i.e. programming language) of the verbatim content

linenumbering

Determines whether lines are numbered

Enumerated values:
“numbered”

Lines are numbered.

“unnumbered”

Lines are not numbered.

startinglinenumber

Specifies the initial line number

xml:space

Can be used to indicate explicitly that whitespace in the verbatim environment is preserved. Whitespace must always be preserved in verbatim environments whether this attribute is specified or not

Enumerated values:
“preserve”

Whitespace must be preserved.

Parents

These elements contain address: abstract, acknowledgements, affiliation, annotation, answer, appendix, article, author, bibliodiv, biblioentry, bibliography, bibliolist, bibliomixed, bibliomset, biblioset, blockquote, callout, calloutlist, caption (db.caption), caution, chapter, colophon, confgroup, constraintdef, cover, danger, dedication, editor, entry, example, figure, footnote, glossary, glossdef, glossdiv, glosslist, important, index, indexdiv, info (db.info), info (db.titleforbidden.info), info (db.titleonly.info), info (db.titleonlyreq.info), info (db.titlereq.info), informalexample, informalfigure, itemizedlist, legalnotice, listitem, merge, meta (db.meta.content), msgexplan, msgtext, note, orderedlist, org, othercredit, para, partintro, person, preface, procedure, publisher, qandadiv, qandaset, question, refsect1, refsect2, refsect3, refsection, refsynopsisdiv, result, revdescription, sect1, sect2, sect3, sect4, sect5, section, setindex, sidebar, simplesect, step, taskprerequisites, taskrelated, tasksummary, td, textobject, th, tip, toc, tocdiv, topic, variablelist, warning.

Children

The following elements occur in address: text, abbrev, acronym, alt, anchor, annotation, biblioref, city, coref, country, date, email, emphasis (db._emphasis), fax, firstterm (db._firstterm), footnote, footnoteref, foreignphrase (db._foreignphrase), glossterm (db._glossterm), indexterm (db.indexterm.endofrange), indexterm (db.indexterm.singular), indexterm (db.indexterm.startofrange), inlinemediaobject, link, olink, orgname, otheraddr, personname, phone, phrase (db._phrase), pob, postcode, quote (db._quote), remark, replaceable, state, street, subscript, superscript, trademark, uri, wordasword, xref.

See Also

Related elements: city, country, email, fax, otheraddr, phone, pob, postcode, state, street.

Examples

 1 |<article xmlns='http://docbook.org/ns/docbook'>
   |<title>Example address</title>
   | 
   |<para>An example of a postal mail address in the United States:
 5 |<address>
   |John and Jane Doe
   |<street>100 Main Street</street>
   |<city>Anytown</city>, <state>NY</state> <postcode>12345</postcode>
   |<country>USA</country>
10 |</address>
   |</para>
   | 
   |</article>

An example of a postal mail address in the United States:

John and Jane Doe
100 Main Street
Anytown, NY 12345
USA

 1 |<article xmlns='http://docbook.org/ns/docbook'>
   |<title>Example address</title>
   | 
   |<para>An example of a post office box address in the United States:
 5 |<address>
   |<pob>P.O. Box 1234</pob>
   |<city>Anytown</city>, <state>MA</state> <postcode>12345</postcode>
   |<country>USA</country>
   |</address>
10 |</para>
   | 
   |</article>

An example of a post office box address in the United States:

P.O. Box 1234
Anytown, MA 12345
USA

 1 |<article xmlns='http://docbook.org/ns/docbook'>
   |<title>Example address</title>
   | 
   |<para>Addresses can also include phone numbers:
 5 |<address>
   |John Smith
   |<street>100 Pine Blvd</street>
   |<city>Anytown</city>, <state>NY</state> <postcode>12345</postcode>
   |<country>USA</country>
10 |<phone>914.555.1212</phone>
   |<fax>914.555.1212</fax>
   |</address>
   |</para>
   | 
15 |</article>

Addresses can also include phone numbers:

John Smith
100 Pine Blvd
Anytown, NY 12345
USA
914.555.1212
914.555.1212