inlineequation
inlineequation — A mathematical equation or expression occurring inline.
Synopsis
inlineequation ::=
- Sequence of:
alt
?- One of:
- One or more of:
- Graphic inlines
- One or more of:
- One or more of:
- One or more of:
Attributes
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
No additional attributes.
Description
An inlineequation
s is an expression (usually
mathematical) that occurs in the text flow.
Processing expectations
Formatted inline.
Attributes
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
- any attribute
Any attribute in any other explicit namespace
Parents
These elements contain inlineequation
: bridgehead
, caption
(db.html.caption), citation
, citetitle
, classsynopsisinfo
, contrib
, emphasis
(db.emphasis), entry
, enumitemdescription
, firstterm
(db.firstterm), funcsynopsisinfo
, glosssee
, glossseealso
, glossterm
(db.glossterm), link
, literallayout
, member
, meta
(db.meta.content), olink
, orgdiv
, para
, phrase
(db.phrase), primary
, primaryie
, programlisting
, quote
(db.quote), refdescriptor
, refentrytitle
, refname
, refpurpose
, remark
, screen
, secondary
, secondaryie
, see
, seealso
, seealsoie
, seeie
, seg
, segtitle
, simpara
, subtitle
, synopsis
, synopsisinfo
, td
, term
, termdef
, tertiary
, tertiaryie
, th
, title
, titleabbrev
, tocentry
.
Children
The following elements occur in inlineequation
: alt
, inlinemediaobject
, mathphrase
, mml:*
.
See Also
Related elements: equation
, informalequation
, subscript
, superscript
.
Examples
1 |<article xmlns='http://docbook.org/ns/docbook'>
|<title>Example inlineequation</title>
||
<para>Einstein's theory of relativity includes one of the most
5 |widely recognized formulas in the world:
|<inlineequation>
|<alt>e=mc^2</alt>
|<inlinemediaobject>
|<imageobject condition="print">
10 |<imagedata fileref="figs/print/db5d_refeqn03.pdf"/>
|</imageobject>
|<imageobject condition="web">
|<imagedata fileref="figs/web/db5d_refeqn03.png"/>
|</imageobject>
15 |</inlinemediaobject>
|</inlineequation>
|</para>
||
</article>
Einstein's theory of relativity includes one of the most widely recognized formulas in the world: