bibliocoverage
bibliocoverage — The spatial or temporal coverage of a document.
Synopsis
- Zero or more of:
- text
- Graphic inlines
- Indexing inlines
- Linking inlines
- Ubiquitous inlines
abbrev
acronym
alt
anchor
biblioref
coref
date
emphasis
(db._emphasis)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
phrase
(db._phrase)quote
(db._quote)remark
subscript
superscript
trademark
wordasword
xref
Attributes
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
Additional attributes:
- All of:
- Exactly one of:
- spatial (enumeration)
- “dcmipoint”
- “iso3166”
- “dcmibox”
- “tgn”
- Each of:
- spatial (enumeration)
- “otherspatial”
- otherspatial (NMTOKEN)
- spatial (enumeration)
- spatial (enumeration)
- Exactly one of:
- temporal (enumeration)
- “dcmiperiod”
- “w3c-dtf”
- Each of:
- temporal (enumeration)
- “othertemporal”
- othertemporal (NMTOKEN)
- temporal (enumeration)
- temporal (enumeration)
- Exactly one of:
Required attributes are shown in bold.
Description
The bibliocoverage
element is equivalent to the
coverage element of the Dublin Core Metadata Element
Set [DCMI].
The Dublin Core defines coverage as “the extent or scope of the content of the resource.” It goes on to say:
Spatial topic and spatial applicability may be a named place or a location specified by its geographic coordinates. Temporal topic may be a named period, date, or date range. A jurisdiction may be a named administrative entity or a geographic place to which the resource applies.
Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the Thesaurus of Geographic Names Online []. Where appropriate, named places or time periods can be used in preference to numeric identifiers such as sets of coordinates or date ranges.
DocBook V4.2 added
bibliocoverage
, bibliorelation
,
and bibliosource
to make the DocBook meta-information
wrappers a superset of the Dublin Core.
Processing expectations
Formatted inline. Sometimes suppressed.
This element is used for both spatial and temporal coverage, but
only one should be specified at a time. In other words, on any given
instance of the bibliocoverage
element, specify
either the spatial
attribute or
the temporal
attribute, but not
both.
Attributes
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
- otherspatial
A keyword that identifies the type of non-standard coverage
- othertemporal
A keyword that identifies the type of non-standard coverage
- spatial
Specifies the type of spatial coverage
Enumerated values: “dcmipoint” The DCMI Point identifies a point in space using its geographic coordinates
“iso3166” ISO 3166 Codes for the representation of names of countries
“dcmibox” The DCMI Box identifies a region of space using its geographic limits
“tgn” The Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names
- temporal
Specifies the type of temporal coverage
Enumerated values: “dcmiperiod” A specification of the limits of a time interval
“w3c-dtf” W3C Encoding rules for dates and times—a profile based on ISO 8601
Parents
These elements contain bibliocoverage
: biblioentry
, bibliomixed
, bibliomset
, biblioset
, info
(db.info), info
(db.titleforbidden.info), info
(db.titleonly.info), info
(db.titleonlyreq.info), info
(db.titlereq.info).
Children
The following elements occur in bibliocoverage: text, abbrev
, acronym
, alt
, anchor
, biblioref
, coref
, date
, emphasis
(db._emphasis), 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
, phrase
(db._phrase), quote
(db._quote), remark
, subscript
, superscript
, trademark
, wordasword
, xref
.