10.1.86. <ref>
| <ref> (reference) defines a reference to another location, possibly modified by additional text or comment. [3.7. Simple Links and Cross-References 17.1. Links] | |||||||
| Module | core — Specification | ||||||
| Attributes |
| ||||||
| Member of | |||||||
| Contained by | core: abbr analytic author bibl biblScope biblStruct cit citedRange date editor email expan gloss head hi item monogr name note p pubPlace publisher quote ref resp term title dictionaries: def dictScrap entry etym form gram gramGrp hyph lang lbl orth pron sense stress syll usg xr figures: figDesc header: authority change distributor edition extent licence principal publicationStmt rendition tagUsage linking: seg transcr: metamark | ||||||
| May contain | |||||||
| Note | The target and cRef attributes are mutually exclusive. | ||||||
| Example | | ||||||
| Example | | ||||||
| Schematron |
<sch:rule context="tei:ref">
<sch:report test="@target and @cRef">Only one of the attributes @target and @cRef may be supplied on <sch:name/>.</sch:report>
</sch:rule> | ||||||
| Content model |
<content>
<macroRef key="macro.lexicalParaContent"/>
</content>
⚓ | ||||||
| Schema Declaration | | ||||||





