Linuxdoc Reference

A introduction to the linuxdoc dtd

Uwe Böhme, <uwe@hof.baynet.de>

v1.1, 30 January 2000


This article is intended to be a reference for the SGML document type definition linuxdoc, which is coming along with the SGML text formatting system version 1.0. It should also be applicable to future versions which may be found at My Homepage.

1. Making of

2. Introduction

3. A minimalistic document

4. Document Classes

5. Inlines

6. Sectioning

7. Paragraphs

8. Inline Tags

9. Mathematical Formulas

10. Labels and References

11. Indices

12. Literate Programming

13. Reference

Appendix

14. Named Symbols

15. Mathematical Figures

16. Linuxdoc dtd Source


1. Making of

1.1 Legal stuff

Copyright © 1997-2000 by Uwe Böhme. This document may be distributed under the terms set forth in the Linux Documentation Project License at LDP. Please contact the authors if you are unable to get the license. This is free documentation. It is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but without any warranty; without even the implied warranty of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.

This document is not part of ldp (even if I took their form of license). I'm not yet playing in that league.

1.2 Genesis

This document was born trying to learn more about writing texts on my linux system. The one system looking like suitable to my needs was sgml-tools SGML-Tools Organsation an the linuxdoc dtd.

In [SGML-Tools User's Guide 1.0 ($Revision: 1.1.1.1 $)] (see section Reference) the overall structure is described nice and easy. Also [Quick SGML Example, v1.0] (see section Reference) was helpful, but:

A lot of features are not mentioned.

On the way to learn more about it, I met [The qwertz Document Type Definition] (see section Reference). It's as detailed as hoped, but it's not made for the linuxdoc dtd (even if linuxdoc is based on qwertz).

I tried a new approach: Look at the dtd

dtd = document type definition
file itself, and try to understand it.

As time went by I noticed that I also forgot about some stuff, or - at least - didn't point it out strong enough. This will change within the next revision.

Any feedback you might have is welcome (especially help with English spelling or grammar) by e-mail at Uwe Böhme.


2. Introduction

The principle of any sgml'ed document (linuxdoc, docbook, html) is more or less the same:

Don't write how it should look like, but write what it is.

This is a different approach than the standard "wysiwyg"

What you see is what you (should) get (if you are a very lucky one and your computer wins the war against buggy software)
one
You might want to call it wysiwym, i.e. "What you see is what you mean"
. You do not tell the program that this line should be in a bigger font, to look like a headline. What you do is telling that this line is a headline. You do not try to make your document look like a report, but you tag it to be a report. So you tag the text with the appropriate <tag>.

The big advantages of this approache are:

  1. You do not need to mess around with fontsetting, line gaps or anything directly connected to the layout.
  2. You describe your document in a more abstract way so it's more reusable and can be mapped to different media types.
    If you ever tried the reuse a document written in a specialized wysiwy layout for html then you know what I'm talking about.

In addition in all sgml-style documents you will find named symbols This is a concept to expand the charset of the document and to avoid inconsitences in decision of the parser, how to interpret or map some special characters.

How should the parser know weather a < character is starting a tag or should be printed directly. This is solved by the named character lt. If you write &lt; this one will result to < in your text. For a list of the named symbols see Named Symbols.

Hint for the new user

It might be a good idea, to download this document not only as a dvi or ps document, but also to download the sgml source. This offers you the chance to look into the sources, if you find something within this article, wich might fit your needs.


3. A minimalistic document

In this section you'll find what you'll need for a minimalistic linuxdoc dtd conform document. It's intended to give a first touch. Skip this section, if you already now the principles.

3.1 Step By Step

The steps you have to do to create a nice linuxdoc document and map it to the form you need are:

3.2 A Startup Document

We start with a simple document (the numbers and colon in the beginning of the line are for explanation, don't type it!):


1: <!doctype linuxdoc system>
2: <notes>
3: <title>A Small Linuxdoc Example</title>
4: <p>Hello <em>world</em>.</p>
5: <p><bf>Here</bf> we are.</p>
6: </notes>

Now we take a look at the single lines:

  1. A linuxdoc document has to start, like all SGML conform documents, with the preamble. If you like you can take it as a piece of necessary magic, or you can try to find more information about SGML. The preamble is indicating to the SGML-parser, which dtd (document type definition) it should use for checking the syntax of the document.
  2. Open the document class: You have to decide, wich type of document you want to write. See section Document Classes for detailed description about that document classes. The necessary header information, wich is depending on the document class is also explained there. In our case we place a <notes> tag forming a note, wich is indicating a simple unstructured document.
  3. Even if optional it's a good idea to give a title to the document. That's done with the <title> tag.
  4. A paragraph marked by the <p> tag, containing the word world wich is inline emphasized by the <em> tag.
  5. Another completely tagged paragraph, with another word inline boldfaced by the <bf> tag.
  6. Here we close the open document class tag.

The same example may be written a little bit shorter, by leaving out tags which are placed automatically by the parser, and by using shortened tags:


1: <!doctype linuxdoc system>
2: <notes>
3: <title>A Small Linuxdoc Example
4: <p>Hello <em/world/.
5:
6: <bf/Here/ we are.
7: </notes>

Now we look at the single lines again:

  1. The preambel.
  2. The document class (also unchanged).
  3. The title. It's not closed, because the p tag in the next line is implicitely closing it.
  4. The paragraph is implicitly closing the title. The emphasize tag is noted in short form. The short notation you can use only if your tagged text doesn't contain a litteral /. The paragraph is not explicitly closed in this line.
  5. The empty line here is the reason, why you don't need to close the previous paragraph and don't need to open the next one. A empty line is interpreted as a end of the current paragraph and the start of a new one.
  6. Another paragraph (not opened directly), with another short inline tag.
  7. Closing the open document class tag, wich is implicitly also closing the still open paragraph.

Maybe now it's a little bit more clear, who you have to work with tags.


4. Document Classes


<!element linuxdoc o o 
        (sect | chapt | article | report | 
         book | letter | telefax | slides | notes | manpage ) >

This is describing the overall class of the document, so naturally it has (leave alone the doctype definition) to be the first tag enclosing your whole document. Some of the tags namely the sect and chapt (see section Sectioning Tags) doesn't make any sense taken them standalone despite being included as part of more complete classed document, so we'll describe them later as a part of the other document classes. Decide first which of the top mentioned document classes fits the type of the document you want to write best.

To find a detailed description of the document classes see table Document classes.


Chapter
Class tag
Article Tag<atricle>
Report Tag<report>
Book Tag<book>
Letter Tag<letter>
Telefax Tag<telefax>
Slides Tag<slides>
Notes Tag<notes>
Manpage Tag<manpage>
Document classes

To me the article class is the most important one. Thatīs the reason why itīs described first and most detailed.

4.1 Article Tag


<!element article - -
        (titlepag, header?,
         toc?, lof?, lot?, p*, sect*,
         (appendix, sect+)?, biblio?) +(footnote)>

<!attlist article
        opts cdata "null">

You can see that the article needs some tags included. They will be explained in consequence.

The options attribute (opts) takes a comma separated list with thy different style (LaTeX .sty) sheets to inlude within the document.

Titlepage Tag


<!element titlepag o o (title, author, date?, abstract?)>

The Titlepage Tag (titlepag) is implicitly placed as soon a you started your document class. You don't need to write it explicitly. Anyway you have to note it's mandatory tags. It's purpouse is to describe the layout and elements of the titlepages.

Title Tag


<!element title - o (%inline, subtitle?) +(newline)>

Each document class wich owns a titlepage of course needs a title, wich is noted down with a <title> tag. You don't need to close thatone. A title may contain a subtitle started by the <subtitle> tag.

If you look at the headerpage of this document you'll find it to be mapped from the tags:

<title>Linuxdoc Reference
<subtitle>A introduction to the linuxdoc dtd

Author Tag


<!element author - o (name, thanks?, inst?,
                        (and, name, thanks?, inst?)*)>

Usually you place the (your) name here. People should know who wrote the document, so you place a <author> tag. If you don't note the name tag itīs imlicitly placed. The author has also optional items wich can be tagged within the author tag.

If you want to say thanks to anyone (might be somebody providing usefull information) you place it within the <thanks> tag. Next, if your writing is done in your position of an institution staff member, place it within the <inst> tag.

The <and> tag is starting the whole story again, as if there would be a second author tag would have been started. Clearly thisone is for coauthors.

Date Tag

If you want to mark your document with a date, you can do that with the <date> tag.

It's not checked weather you really place a valid date here, but don't abuse it.

Abstract Tag

This tag is intended for an abstract description of your document. Don't mix the <abstract> tag withh an indruduction wich is likely to be placed inside the first section of your document (see section Sectioning).

Header Tag


<!element header - - (lhead, rhead) >
<!element lhead - o (%inline)>
<!element rhead - o (%inline)>

A <header> tag specifies what should be printed at the top of each page. It consists of a left heading i.e. <lhead> and a right heading i.e. <rhead>). Both elements are required, if a heading is used at all, but either may be left empty, so that the effect of having only a left or right heading can be achieved easily enough.

As we will see, an initial header can be given after the title page. Afterwards, a new header can be given for each new chapter or section. The header printed on a page is the one which is in effect at the end of the current page. So that the header will be that of the last section starting on the page.

Table Of Contents Tag

If you place the <toc> tag, a table of contense will be generated, by looking the section heading, and adding references.

In a hyperref document, this might be hyperrefs, in a LaTeX document you will come to see the pagenumbers.
Only the sections major to the sect3 will be included.

List Of Figures Tag

If you place the <lof> tag, a list of figures will be generated, by looking the captions of the figures, and adding references.

List Of Tables Tag

If you place the <lot> tag, a list of tables will be generated, by looking the captions of the tables, and adding references.

Body

Here you place various sections according section Sectioning. There is no body tag. The body starts with the first chapter, section or paragraph.

Appendix Tag

In the end of the article you can place the <appendix> tag

Really you shouldn't think about people (e.g. m.d.s knifing your belly here.
, wich starts a area of appended sections. The appendix tag implies a different section numbering type to the following section tags.

Bibliography Tag

It's intended to gather all the <cites> and <ncites> you used within your document. The <biblio> tag will be replaced by a bibliography according the mapping type of the document, maybe by hyperrefs maybe by section numbers or anything wich might be useful.

Until now I've not been able to create a .bbl file, so I wasn't able to verify.

Footnote Tag

A footnote may be place in any spot of your document. Exactly the spot in yout document where you are placing the <footnote> tag should be the one where the reference to the tagged text shuld be rendered. It should be used for additional information, wich is not necessary for understanding the primary purpouse of yor document but might be usefull, interesting, or funny.

Whereas the last one is not always true, even if you try.
anywhere within the article.

4.2 Report Tag


<!element report - -
        (titlepag, header?, toc?, lof?, lot?, p*,
         chapt*, (appendix, chapt+)?, biblio?) +(footnote)>

The report is a document class with a chapter oriented approach. So within a document clasified by a <report> tag the toplevel is grouped by the <chapt> tag (see Sectioning). The rest of the structure is identical to the article class Article Tag.

4.3 Book Tag


<!element book  - -
        (titlepag, header?, toc?, lof?, lot?, p*, chapt*,
         (appendix, chapt+)?, biblio?) +(footnote) >

You will notice that the book element is identical to the report Report Tag. So anything valid there is also valid if you classify your document with a <book> tag.

4.4 Letter Tag


<!entity  % addr "(address?, email?, phone?, fax?)" >

<!element letter - -
        (from, %addr, to, %addr, cc?, subject?, sref?, rref?,
         rdate?, opening, p+, closing, encl?, ps?)>

Also the purpose of the letter document class should be quite self explaining. Place a <letter> tag if you want to write one.

The letter's tags ar described in table Tags in a letter


tag
mandatorywhat's it
fromyesfrom sender
addressnosender's address
emailnosender's email
phonenosender's phone
faxnosender's fax
toyesreceiver
addressnoreceiver's address
emailnoreceiver's email
phonenoreceiver's phone
faxnoreceiver's fax
ccnocarbon copy
subjectnoletters subject
srefnosender's reference
rrefnoreceiver's reference
rdatenoreceived date??
openingyesopening
paragraphsyessee Paragraphs
closingyesclosing
enclnoenclosure
psnopost scriptum
Tags in a letter

4.5 Telefax Tag


<!element telefax - -
        (from, %addr, to, address, email?,
         phone?, fax, cc?, subject?,
         opening, p+, closing, ps?)>

Overall the structure is same to the letter class. The only difference is that with the <telefax> tag the receiver's <fax> tag becomes mandatory.
Should be obvious why.

4.6 Slides Tag


<!element slides - - (slide*) >

The slides class is intended for overhead slides and transparencies. So the structure of a document classified by a <slides> tag is a very simple one. It contains single slide(s) startes by a <slide> tag. Nothing else. If not explicitly written the first slide is started implicitly.

Slide Tag


<!element slide - o (title?, p+) >

A <slide> tag is only allowed within the slides document class. A slide may contain:

A title (see section The Title Tag) and one or more paragraphs (see section Paragraphs). That's all.

4.7 Note Tag


<!element notes - - (title?, p+) >

Intended as a class for personal notes the structure is even more simplified than the slides document class (see The Slide Tag). After classifying a document with the <notes> tag only a title (see section The Title Tag) and one or more paragraphs (see section Paragraphs) are allowed.

4.8 Manual Page Tag


<!element manpage - - (sect1*)
        -(sect2 | f | %mathpar | figure | tabular |
          table | %xref | %thrm )>

This document class is intended for writing manual pages, fitting the need of the man programm. In a document classified by a <manpage> tag the topleve section tag is the sect1 tag (see section Sectioning), for easy pasting manual pages into an article or book document class. The exception here to the nortmal sectioning is, that there is only one subsection level allowed (sect2).


5. Inlines


<!entity % inline
        " (#pcdata | f| x| %emph; |sq| %xref | %index | file )* " >

Inlines may occure anywhere within the text, and doesn't have any influence to the textflow or logical structure of the document.

#pcdata

Parsed character data is just normal written text within the flow wich may contain other inlines.

f

Inline mathematical formulas according to the maths.dtd. See The Formula Tag.

x

The external tag wich is bypassing the parser. Tagged data walks directly into the mapped file. See chapter The External Tag for detailed information.

%emph;

Emphasizes of the text. See chapter Emphasizes.

sq

Shortquotes within the textflow. See chapter The Short Quote Tad.

%xref

XReferecnces within the text or external references. See chapter Labels and References.

%index

Again I can't explain this one. If you can, please mail.

file

Again I can't explain this one (I only could guess about picture files in eps). If you can, please mail.


6. Sectioning


<!element chapt - o (%sect, sect*) +(footnote)>
<!element sect  - o (%sect, sect1*) +(footnote)>
<!element sect1 - o (%sect, sect2*)>
<!element sect2 - o (%sect, sect3*)>
<!element sect3 - o (%sect, sect4*)>
<!element sect4 - o (%sect)>

The sectioning
Also the chapt tag is a sectioning tag.
is done by the according elements, forming the section tree. They are bringing the various paragraphs within our document to follow a nice tree. The top level tag and the allowed depth is varying with the document class (see section The Document Class).

The normal hierarchy is

chapt
    sect
        sect1
            sect2
                sect3
                    sect4

Just take a book, look the table of conetents and you will see.

Each of the tags out of the sectionings has nearly the same syntax. All of them owe a heading. The heading tag is placed implicitly if you don't note it down. Also the each of the sectioning tags may contain a header tag, changing the current document header (see section The Header Tag).

Within the you may place subordinate sections and paragraphs (see Paragraphs).

Some of the sectioning tags may only appear in special document classes ( Document Classes).

Hint:

It's wise to place a label tag after the text of the section tag, even if you don't want to refer to the section Labels and references. Later when your document grows you might want to.


7. Paragraphs


<!entity % sectpar
        " %par; | figure | tabular | table | %mathpar; |
          %thrm; | %litprog; ">

<!entity % par       
        "  %list; | comment | lq | quote | tscreen " >

<!entity % litprog " code | verb " >

Each of the here described tags form a paragraph.

For obvious reason a paragraph is normally

The behaviour of the exceptions figure and tabular are explained there.
starting and ending with a new line.
How else you would notice it's a paragraph ?

There are some tags, wich always form a paragraph, and one way to form a paragraph implicitly. There are various types of paragraphs, because not every type of paragraph is allowed to appear in every document class in every place.

The different types of paragraphs are explained in the next sections. For more details about %litprog; see Literate Programming.

7.1 Normal Paragraph

Normal paragraphs can be formed in two ways:

Paragraph tag

The <p> tag is starting a new paragraph. This tag is mandatory if you want to finish a section header without explicitly closing the sect tag. In this case <p> tag then closes the <sect> tag automatically.

Empty Newline

A empty line between two paragraph is implicitly starting a new paragraph. Take care within descriptive lists. There a empty <tag> tag will not be paragraphed by an empty line.

7.2 List-like Paragraphs


<!entity % list
        " list | itemize | enum | descrip " >

This four tags indicate the starting of a list-like paragraph. Within each of the lists the single items are separated by an item tag.
<!element item o o ((%inline; | %sectpar;)*, p*) >

As you can see, a item may again contain paragraphs (and therefore also may contain other lists - even of a different type).

List Tag


<!element list - - (item+)>

The list tag will be mapped to a nacked list without bullets, numers or anything else.

To see it, I place a small example:


<list>
<item>A point
<item>Another one
<item>Last
</list>

Will look (depending on the mapping) like:

  • A point
  • Another one
  • Last
  • Itemize Tag


    <!element itemize - - (item+)>
    

    The itemize tag will be mapped to a list with bullets, wich is usually place for lists where the order of the items is not important.

    A small example:


    <itemize>
    <item>A point
    <item>Another one
    <item>Last
    </itemize>
    

    Will look (depending on the mapping) like:

    Enum Tag


    <!element enum - - (item+)>
    

    The enum tag will be mapped to a list with numbers.

    A small example:


    <enum>
    <item>A point
    <item>Another one
    <item>Last
    </enum>
    

    Will look (depending on the mapping) like:

    1. A point
    2. Another one
    3. Last

    Descrip Tag


    <!element descrip - - (tag?, p+)+ >
    

    The descrip tag will be mapped to a descriptive list. The concept here is a little bit different than with the other types of lists mentioned above.

    Here you place a tag (this time the tag's name is really litteraly tag) wich is described later on.

    A small example:


    <descrip>
    <tag/sgml/structured general markup language.
    <tag/html - hypertext markup language/
    A sgml implementation.
    It contains some concepts about linking information together in a very
    convenient way.
    This made it to be so successful and to become the standard for documents
    published by the internet.
    <tag/internet/A worldwide connected internet (internet here as a
    technical term)
    </descrip>
    

    Will look (depending on the mapping) like:

    sgml

    structured general markup language.

    html - hypertext markup language

    A sgml implementation. It contains some concepts about linking information together in a very covenient way. This made it to be so successfull and to become the standard for documents published by the internet.

    internet

    A worldwide connected internet (internet here as a technical term)

    7.3 Figures and Tables

    The <figure> and the <table> tags form very special paragraphs. Not always they stay within the normal textflow. Both of the tags can hold a loc (loction) attribute wich is telling how to handle the flow of this special paragraph.

    The value of the loc attribute is a string of up to four letters, where each letter declares a location at which the figure or table may appear, as described in table Table Locations.


    h
    hereAt the same location as in the SGML file
    ttopAt the top of a page
    bbottomAt the bottom of a page
    ppageOn a separate page only with figures and tables
    Table Locations

    The default value of the loc attribute is top.

    Table Tag


    <!element table   - - (tabular, caption?) >
    

    As you can see a table consists of the <table> tag itself, including a <tabular> tag and a optional <caption> tag.

    The <tabular> tag may also be placed without a <table> tag so it is described in detail in it's own section (see Tabular Tag).

    The caption is used also to place the entry for the list of tables if you stated one (see The List Of Tables Tag).

    A short example will show how it's working together.

    <table loc="ht">
    <tabular ca="lcr">
    Look|this|table@
    Isn't|it|nice@
    1.234|mixed|columns
    </tabular>
    <caption>A sample table
    </table>
    


    Look
    thistable
    Isn'titnice
    1.234mixedcolumns
    A sample table

    The caption "A sample table" would be the name in the list of tables.

    Figure Tag


    <!element figure - - ((eps | ph ), img*, caption?)>
    

    The usage of the <figure> tag is equivalent to the <table> tag. Instead of the <tabular> tag you place either a <eps> or a <ph> tag.

    Encapsulated Postscript™ Tag


    <!attlist eps
            file cdata #required
            height cdata "5cm"
            angle cdata "0">
    

    The <eps> tag is intended for including a external file in encapsulated postscript™ format into the document.

    The attributes of the <eps> tag are:

    file

    The file attribute needs the file name of a encapsulated postscript™ file ending with a .ps suffix. The mandatory .ps suffix must not be written.

    height

    The height of the space the file is zoomed to. If you don't specify it defaults to 5cm. Take care that there's no spcae between the number and the length unit (i, cm).

    angle

    The angle is given in normal degrees (0-360) and as the number is increasing the file is rotated counter clockwise.

    A example:

    <figure loc="here">
    <eps file="logo" height="4cm" angle="15">
    <img src="logo.gif">
    <caption>A included encapsulated postscript&trade;
    </figure>
    

    The img tag is ignored by LaTeX-mapping and useful for html, 'cause most browsers don't know about eps.

    A included encapsulated postscript™ file.

    The caption here would go to the list of figures as decribed in section The List Of Figures Tag.

    Placeholder Tag


    <!attlist ph
            vspace cdata #required>
    

    This tag doesn't place anything but keeps a clean space for good old manual picture pasting. The space kept free is destined by the vspace attribte. Caveat: The numerical argument for the vspace attribte needs a unit directly behind the number. Don't leave a space there (same as for the height attribute in Encapsulated Postscript™ Tag.

    <figure loc="ht">
    <ph vspace="5cm">
    <caption>A blank space.
    </figure>
    

    Results to:

    A blank space for gluing a photo

    At this point you might want to look for your scissors and the glue.

    7.4 Tabular Tag


    <!element tabular - - 
           (hline?, %tabrow, (rowsep, hline?, %tabrow)*, caption?) >
    

    The <tabular> tag is interpreted as an own paragraph, if it is written standalone. Together with a <table> tag it gets part of the paragraph of the <table> tag (see Table tag).

    Within the tabular tag you have rows an collumns wich are separating the text. You have to have at least one collumn and one row.

    Wouldn't be very usefull otherwise.

    The <tabular> tag has a mandatory ca attribute for collumn allignement. The collumn allignement holds a single character for each collumn in their order from left to right. The chracters you may place per collumn described in table Collumns allignements


    char
    alignment
    lleft
    ccentered
    rright
    Column alignments

    In theory you should be able to place a | into the ca attribure for drawing a horizontal line for separating two collumns. The problem: It doesn't work. The parser accepts it nicely, only the LaTeX output will map | to {$|$} wich is of course the set for four collumns with invalid collumn allignement for all four collums. I'll try to figure out what to do about it.

    The columns within the <tabular> tag are separated by a collumn separator, the <colsep> tag. The character | is translated to <colsep> so you can also place that one instead

    Less typing, more fun.
    .

    What's valid for collumns is also valid for rows. You separate the by a row separator, the <rowsep> tag. The character @ is translated to <rowsep>.

    Optional you can place a horizontal line with the <hline> tag. Take care with that one: The SGML tools will parse it nicely weather you place it in front of the row you want under the line, or behind the end of the row you want over it. But the only place to write it without causing the parser to shout "error" is to write it dircetly and without space or newline behind the row separator.

    <tabular ca="lcr">
    Look|this|table@<hline>
    Isn't|it|nice@
    1.234|mixed|columns@
    </tabular>
    

    Results in table Sample table for tabular tag


    Look
    thistable
    Isn'titnice
    1.234mixedcolumns
    Sample table for tabular tag

    Attention:

    In LaTeX mapping everything works nice if you place a tabular tag without a table tag, only in the other mappings (e.g. html) it will be messed up.

    7.5 Mathematical Paragraph


    <!entity % mathpar " dm | eq " >
    

    A mathematical paragraph consits either of a displayed formula, tagged by <dm>

    No, sorry, not for Deutschmark! ;-)
    or an equation, tagged by <eq>. They work very much the same.

    Both of these tags contain a mathematical formula. See Mathematical Formulas for the tags valid here.

    Note:

    Because neither Netscape nor Microsoft has seen any need to add mathematical mappings to their browsers (like demanded and defined by w3c), there is no nice way of mapping, or at least displaying the math stuff in html. So if you view the online version, feel free to wonder what nonsense this man is telling here. Might be you should take a glance at the postscript version.

    Displayed Formula Tag

    This tag displays a mathematical formula as a paragraph. The formula is mapped centered as a single line

    No guarantee for that. You know: Mapping is a matter of taste.
    .

    <dm>(a+b)<sup/2/=a<sup/2/+2ab+b<sup/2/</dm>
    
    Is mapped to: (a+b)2=a2+2ab+b2

    Equation Tag

    <dm>(a+b)<sup/2/=a<sup/2/+2ab+b<sup/2/</dm>
    
    Is mapped to: (a+b)2=a2+2ab+b2

    7.6 Theorem Paragraph


    <!entity % thrm 
            " def | prop | lemma | coroll | proof | theorem " >
    
    <!element def - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element prop - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element lemma - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element coroll - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element proof - - (p+) >
    <!element theorem - - (thtag?, p+) >
    

    As you can see the different types of theorem paragraphs are nearly identical. The only exception wich is a little bit different is the proof wich doesn't own a thtag. For all the others the thtag is giving the tag of the theorem paragraph.

    Yust try to use that one, wich is fitting the meaning of what you are typing.

    <thrm>
    <thtag>Alexander's thrm</thtag>
    Let <f>&lt;fi/G/</f> be a set of non-trivially achievable subgoals
    and &mu; an order on <f>&lt;fi/G/</f>. &mu; is abstractly
    indicative if and only if it is a linearization of
    <f><lim><op>&mu;</op><ll><fi/G/</ll><ul>&ast;</ul></lim></f>.
    </theorem>
    

    The thrm is replaced by the adequate tag.

    Maybe somebody knowing about mathematics would be shocked about my abuse of the types, but I'm lazy so I simply copied the examples:

    Definition (def): Alexander's Definition

    Let G be a set of nontrivially achievable subgoals and µ an order on G. µ is abstractly indicative if and only if it is a linearization of µG

    .

    Proposition (prop): Alexander's Proposition

    Let G be a set of nontrivially achievable subgoals and µ an order on G. µ is abstractly indicative if and only if it is a linearization of µG

    .

    Lemma (lemma): Alexander's Lemma

    Let G be a set of nontrivially achievable subgoals and µ an order on G. µ is abstractly indicative if and only if it is a linearization of µG

    .

    Corollation (coroll): Alexander's Corollary

    Let G be a set of nontrivially achievable subgoals and µ an order on G. µ is abstractly indicative if and only if it is a linearization of µG

    .

    Alexander's Theorem

    Let G be a set of nontrivially achievable subgoals and µ an order on G. µ is abstractly indicative if and only if it is a linearization of µG

    .

    The proof is just the same without the thtag:

    Let G be a set of nontrivially achievable subgoals and µ an order on G. µ is abstractly indicative if and only if it is a linearization of µG

    .

    7.7 Code and verbatim Paragraphs

    Both tags from a paragraph and have very similar behavior. Inside this tags most special characters don't need their named form as in section Named Symbols. The exceptions are:

    1. &etago; -> </ -> end of tag open
    Maybe later the list will grow.

    In difference to the normal paragraph mapping white-spaces and newlines will be mapped literally (as you write them in your source).

    Also (with respect to manual layout) the font for mapping will be a non-proportional one.

    See the difference between IIWW and IIWW.

    Note:

    Aggain, I'm neither a native speaker not I love mathematics a lot. So I just placed some nonsense, wich might cause headache and grey hair for people who want to use this document for learning to formulate mathematical or physical theories.

    Feel free to send better examples.

    Code Tag


    <!element code - - rcdata>
    

    Use the code tag, if you want to write sourcecode example within your text.

    A code sample

    <code>


    #include <stdio.h>
    int main() {
        printf("Hello world");
        return 1;
    }
    

    </code>

    Verbatim Tag


    <!element verb - - rcdata>
    

    Use the verbatim tag for anything else than sourcecode (use Code Tag for this) which needs the good old whitespace padding, like terminal hardcopy, ASCII-Graphics etc.

    A verb sample

    <verb>

    /////////
    | *   * |
    |   |   |
    | <---> |
     \_____/
    
    </verb>


    8. Inline Tags

    Here the abstract inlines are broken down until only true and usable tags will remain. Let's recall:


    <!entity % inline 
            " (#pcdata | f| x| %emph; |sq| %xref | %index | file )* " >
    

    Inlines don't have a influence to paragraphing, sectioning or document classing. Just modifying text within it's normal flow.

    8.1 Emphasizes


    <!entity % emph 
            " em|it|bf|sf|sl|tt|cparam " >
    

    The emphasizes are gathering the tags for emphasizing inline text.

    The different types of emphasizes are:

    em -> The Emphasize Tag

    I hate to be redundant but I have to say: The emphasize tag you place for emphasized text. Normally it's mapped to italic letters. So if you write <em/a emphasized text/ it will be mapped to a emphasized text.

    it -> The Italic Tag

    The italic tag you place for a cursive mapping. If you write <it/a italic text/ it will be mapped to a italic text.

    bf -> The Boldface Tag

    The boldface tag you place for a bold mapping. If you write <bf/a bold text/ it will be mapped to a bold text.

    sf -> The Swissfont Tag

    I know that Tom Gordon from GMD is telling that this is the sans serif tag. My interpretation of the sf is swissfont wich for me is more easy to remember. This is mapping the inlined text to a font wich is out of the helvetica family. So <sf/a swissfont text/ will be mapped to a swissfont text.

    sl -> The Slanted Tag

    I think I skip the explanation. <sl/a slanted text/ will be mapped to a slanted text.

    tt -> The Terminaltype Tag

    Text tagged with terminaltype will be placed inline, just like all the other text within a paragraph. It will not be included into source output if you are workink as described in section Literate Programming, even if it's looking like typed code. <tt/a terminal typed text/ will be mapped to a terminal typed text.

    8.2 Short-quote Tag

    Normally this one could be viewed the same level like one of the emphasize tags, but the definition of the linuxdoc dtd is placing it same level like the emphasizes, and so I do.

    The shortquote tag is a inline quotation, not forming an own paragraph. The text <sq/a short quote/ is mapped to "a short quote".

    8.3 Formula Tag

    The formula tag allows us to note down a mathematical formula within the normal text, not appearing in an own line. So the text <f>x=y<sup>2</sup></f> will be displayed as x=y2. See Mathematical Fomulas for the tags valid within the formula.

    8.4 External Tag

    The external tag is passing the tagged data directly through the parser, without modifying it. E.g. to LaTeX.


    9. Mathematical Formulas

    They can appear with in the tags listed in table Places of Mathematical Formulas


    tag
    descriptionsee
    finline formula The Formula Tag
    dmdisplayed formula Mathematical Paragraph
    eqequation Mathematical Paragraph
    Places of Mathematical Formulas

    If you view this document mapped to html you will notice that html has no nice way of displaying mathematical formulas.

    After a little hand parsing the contents of a mathematical tag looks like:


    <!element  xx       - - 
            (((fr|lim|ar|root) | 
              (pr|in|sum) |
              (#pcdata|mc|(tu|phr)) |
              (rf|v|fi) |
              (unl|ovl|sup|inf))*)>
    

    The xx stands for f, dm or eq. All of them are the same.

    Note:

    Because neither Netscape nor Microsoft has seen any need to add mathematical mappings to their browsers (like demanded and defined by w3c), there is no nice way of mapping, or at least displaying the math stuff in html. So if you view the online version, feel free to wonder what nonsense this man is telling here. Might be you should take a glance at the postscript version.

    9.1 Fraction Tag


    <!element  fr       - - (nu,de) >
    <!element  nu       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  de       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    

    So what we see from it is, that a fraction consits of a numerator and a denumerator tag, wich again each one can hold a mathematical formula.

    I think an example will tell you more:

    <dm><fr><nu/7/<de/13/</fr></dm>
    

    results to:

    713

    In case we want to to place 1/2 instead of the numerator without cleaning it up, we'll type:

    <dm><fr><nu><fr><nu/1/<de/2/</fr></nu><de/13/</fr></dm>
    

    Which results to:

    1213

    9.2 Product, Integral and Summation Tag


    <!element  pr       - - (ll,ul,opd?) >
    <!element  in       - - (ll,ul,opd?) >
    <!element  sum      - - (ll,ul,opd?) >
    

    Each of them has a lower limit (ll tag), a upper limit (ul tag) and a optional operand, where each of them again may consist of a formula. The tags are same in syntax like shown in table Tags with upper-, lower limit and operator.


    name
    exampleresult
    Product<f>y=<pr><ll>i=1<ul>n<opd>x<inf/i/</pr></f>y=i=1
      n
    xi
    Integral<f>y=<in><ll>a<ul>b<opd>x<sup/2/</in></f>y=a
      b
    x2
    Summation<f>y=<sum><ll>i=1<ul>n<opd>x<inf/i/</sum></f>y=i=1
      n
    xi
    Tags with upper-, lower limit and operator

    9.3 Limited Tag


    <!element  lim      - - (op,ll,ul,opd?) >
    <!element  op       o o (%fcstxt;|rf|%fph;) -(tu) >
    <!element  ll       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  ul       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  opd      - o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    

    You can use that one for operators with upper and lower limits other than products, sums or integrals. The for the other types defined operator is destinied by the optag, wich can contain again a mathematical formula.

    Bi=0

    xi

    9.4 Array Tag


    <!element  ar       - - (row, (arr, row)*) >
    <!attlist  ar
        ca     cdata    #required >
    <!element  arr      - o empty >
    <!element  arc      - o empty >
    <!entity   arr "<arr>" >
    <!entity   arc "<arc>" >
    

    Of course a reasonable mathematical document needs a way to describe arrays and matrices. The array (ar) is noted down equivalent to a tabular (see section The Tabular Tag). The differences in handling are: Again the characters | and @ are mapped to the adequate separator tag, so you really can note a array same way as a tabular.

    <dm><ar ca="clcr">
    a+b+c | uv    <arc> x-y | 27    @
    a+b   | u+v   | z   | 134   <arr>
    a     | 3u+vw | xyz | 2,978
    </ar></dm>
    

    Is mapped to:

    a+b+c uv x-y 27 a+b u+v z 134 a 3u+vw xyz 2,978

    9.5 Root Tag


    <!element  root     - - ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!attlist  root
            n cdata "">
    

    The root is noted down by the root tag, wich contains a n attribute, holding the value for the "n'th" root.

    <dm><root n="3"/x+y/</dm>
    

    is mapped to:

    x+y

    9.6 Figure Tag


    <!element  fi  - o (#pcdata) >
    

    With the figure tag you can place mathematical figures. The tagged characters are directly mapped to a mathematical figure. Which character is mapped to which figure you'll find in Mathematical Figures.

    9.7 Realfont Tag


    <!element  rf  - o (#pcdata) >
    

    This tag is placing a real font within a mathematical formula.
    I'm really not sure about rf. What should it be?
    No formula is allowed within that tag.

    <dm><rf/Binom:/ (a+b)<sup/2/=a<sup/2/+2ab+b<sup/2/</dm>
    

    is mapped to:

    Binom: (a+b)2=a2+2ab+b2

    9.8 Other Mathematical Tags

    The remaining tags simply modify the tagged formula, without implying any other tag. The effect is shown in table Mathematical tags without included tags


    name
    tagexample result
    vectorv<f><v/a/&times;<v/b/=<v/0/</f>->a×b=0
    overlineovl<f><ovl/1+1/=<ovl/2/</f>->1+1=2
    underlineunl<f><unl/1+1/=<unl/2/</f>->1+1=2
    superiorsup<f>e=m&times;c<sup/2/</f>->e=m×c2
    inferiorinf<f>x<inf/i/:=2x<inf/i-1/+3</f>->xi:=2xi-1+3
    Mathematical tags without included tags


    10. Labels and References


    <!entity % xref
            " label|ref|pageref|cite|url|htmlurl|ncite " >
    

    As soon as itīs a little bit more sophisticated a document will need references to other places within the document.

    10.1 Label Tag


    <!element label - o empty>
    <!attlist label id cdata #required>
    

    If you want to refer to a spot, chapter or section within your document you place a label tag.

    A example could look like:


    <sect1>Welcome to the article<label id="intro">
    <p>...
    

    10.2 Reference Tag


    <!element ref - o empty>
    <!attlist ref
            id cdata #required
            name cdata "<@@refnam>">
    

    With this tag you can refer to a place within your document labeled as in Label Tag.

    The way the reference is mapped in you document again depends to the mapper. May result to a hyper-ref (HTML) or a section number (LaTeX).

    10.3 Page reference Tag


    <!element pageref - o empty>
    <!attlist pageref
            id cdata #required>
    

    A example for a pageref:


    <pageref id="intro">
    

    In the HTML mapping there is no use for pageref, because there are no page numbers. In LaTeX mapping the tag is mapped to the pagenumber of the reffered label.

    10.4 Url Tag


    <!element url - o empty>
    <!attlist url
            url cdata #required
            name cdata "<@@urlnam>" >
    

    A example for a url:


    <url url="http://www.gnu.org" name="GNU Organization">
    

    GNU Organisation

    The mapping to html brings up a hyper-ref in your document. The reference is the value of the url attribute, the text standing in the Hyperref is the name attribute's value.

    In LaTeX mapping this one results to the name followed by the url.

    10.5 Htmlurl Tag


    <!element htmlurl - o empty>
    <!attlist htmlurl
            url cdata #required
            name cdata "<@@urlnam>" >
    

    A example for a htmlurl:
    <htmlurl url="http://www.gnu.org" name="GNU Organization">
    

    GNU Organisation

    The only difference between this tag and the Url Tag is in the LaTeX mapping.

    The LaTeX mapping simply drops the url attribute and emphasizes the name.

    In all other cases it's absolutely the same as the url tag.

    10.6 Cite Tag


    <!element cite - o empty>
    <!attlist cite
            id cdata #required>
    

    AFAIK this one needīs bibTeX to work nicely. So I'm terribly sorry, but I was not jet able to make use of it. For that reason for sure I'm the wrong one to explain about it.

    10.7 Ncite Tag


    <!element ncite - o empty>
    <!attlist ncite
            id cdata #required
            note cdata #required>
    

    Same as Cite Tag.


    11. Indices


    <!entity % index "idx|cdx|nidx|ncdx" >
    
    <!element idx - - (#pcdata)>
    <!element cdx - - (#pcdata)>
    <!element nidx - - (#pcdata)>
    <!element ncdx - - (#pcdata)>
    


    tag
    my translation
    idxindex
    cdxcode index (terminaltype index)
    nidxinvisible index
    ncdxinvisible code index (terminaltype index)
    Index elements

    The index tags serve for making a index of your document. They are only useful if you want do do LaTeX mapping. They only differ very slightly as mentioned in table Index elements.

    11.1 Including a index

    There are two ways to include indices into your document. Look at both and decide.

    Manually

    1. Set the opts attribute of your document class to contain the packages makeidx. You do that by: <article opts="makeidx">.
    2. Mark all the words you want to be in the index later with a idx tag or cdx tag. If the word you want to index to a location in your document is not within the text you simply write it at the location you want to index with the nidx tag. Itīs like the normal idx only the tagged text will be silently dropped in the normal document.
    3. Process your file with makeindex sgml2latex -m mydocument.sgml.
      This will produce an additional mydocument.idx.
    4. Process mydocument.idx with the makeindex command like makeindex mydocument.idx.
      This will produce an additional mydocument.ind.
    5. To include the now generated index in your document you process your document with sgml2latex -o tex -m mydocument.sgml.
      This results in output of mydocument.tex.
    6. Edit mydocument.tex with the editor of your choice.
      You look for the line \end{document} (should be somewhere close to the end of the file) and insert the text \printindex bevor this line.
    7. Process the modified file with latex mydocument.tex.
      This gives you the final mydocument.dvi wich aggain you might process with dvips to generate a postscript document.
    A lot of a mess, ain't it?

    Hacked

    I'm currently working on a patch to the sgmltools to automate the inclusion and generation of a index. To find out the current state see http://www.bnhof.de/~uwe/lnd/indexpatch/index.html.


    12. Literate Programming


    <!entity % litprog " code | verb " >
    

    This one is a funny thing. It's the idea of not to write some comment text within a program, and might be to take later some special tools, to extract the text
    Think of perlpod.
    , but to write a big document and later to extract the code from it.
    People who don't like to document their code will not appreciate.
    The principle is: All text within verb and code tags, will be gathered into a sourcefile.

    That's it, because for now I don't remember the name of the tool doing thatone.


    13. Reference


    14. Named Symbols

    14.1 Named Characters

    This is a slightly modified list taken from [SGML-Tools User's Guide 1.0 ($Revision: 1.1.1.1 $)]. If you miss some, don't hesitate to mail. A lot of the named characters shown in table Named Characters are same as in the html-dtd.


    AElig
    Æ Aacute Á Acirc  Ae Ä Agrave À Atilde Ã
    Auml Ä Ccedil Ç Eacute É Egrave È Euml Ë Iacute Í
    Icirc Î Igrave Ì Iuml Ï Ntilde Ñ Oacute Ó Ocirc Ô
    Oe Ö Ograve Ò Oslash Ø Ouml Ö Uacute Ú Ue Ü
    Ugrave Ù Uuml Ü Yacute Ý aacute á acirc â ae ä
    aelig æ agrave à amp & apos ' aring å arr
    ast * atilde ã auml ä bsol \ bull ccedil ç
    cir circ ^ clubs colon : comma , commat @
    copy © darr deg ° diams divide ÷ dollar $
    dquot " eacute é ecirc ê egrave è equals = etago </
    euml ë excl ! frac12 1/2 frac14 1/4 frac18 1/8 frac34 3/4
    frac38 3/8 frac58 5/8 frac78 7/8 gt > half 1/2 hearts
    hellip ... horbar hyphen iacute í icirc î iexcl ¡
    igrave ì iquest ¿ iuml ï laquo « larr lcub {
    ldquo lowbar _ lpar ( lsqb [ lsquo lt <
    mdash micro µ middot · mu µ ndash not ¬
    ntilde ñ num # oacute ó ocirc ô oe ö ograve ò
    ohm Ω ordf ª ordm º oslash ø otilde õ ouml ö
    para percnt % period . plus + plusmn ± pound Ģ
    quest ? quot " raquo » rarr -> rcub } rdquo
    reg ® rpar ) rsqb ] rsquo sect § semi ;
    sol / spades sup1 ^1 sup2 ^2 sup3 ^3 sz ß
    szlig ß tilde ~ times × trade uacute ú uarr
    ucirc û ue ü ugrave ù uuml ü verbar | yacute ý
    Named Characters

    14.2 Named Whitespaces

    There is a small number of whatever you want to name it. The look like named characters, but will be printed not always, or not at all.

    thinsp

    Thin space:

    d&thinsp;D ->d D

    emsp

    Emphasized space: d&emsp;D -> d D

    ensp

    Normal space: /d&ensp;D/ -> d D

    nbsp

    No break space: A spaces at wich the line is not allowed to be broken. Two words separated by a nbsp will be treated by parser and mapper to be a single long one.

    shy

    Suggest Hyphen: If the mapper is up to break a word, with has the shy tag inside, it will probably do the wordbreak at the place of the shy tag and place a hyphen instead. If no wordbreak is necessary the shy expands to nothging at all.


    15. Mathematical Figures


    a-ab-bc-cd-de-ef-fg-gh-hi-ij-jk-kl-lm-mn-no-op-pq-qr-rs-st-tu-uv-vw-wx-xy-yz-z   
    A-AB-BC-CD-DE-EF-FG-GH-HI-IJ-JK-KL-LM-MN-NO-OP-PQ-QR-RS-ST-TU-UV-VW-WX-XY-YZ-Z   
    Mathematical Figures

    The special mappings for characters you might use for building up mathematical figures are shown in table Mathematical Figures.


    16. Linuxdoc dtd Source

    This is the linuxdoc.dtd used to parse this document. The revision log, revision comments and a few redundant lines are taken out for saving paper and screenspace.


    <!-- This is a DTD, but will be read as -*- sgml -*-   -->
    <!-- ================================================= -->
    <!-- $Id: lnd.sgml,v 1.1.1.1 2000/03/05 14:40:31 uwe Exp $ 
    
         This is LINUXDOC96 DTD for SGML-Tools.
    
         This was LINUXDOC.DTD,
         a hacked version of QWERTZ.DTD v1.3 by Matt Welsh,
         Greg Hankins, Eric Raymond, Marc Baudoin and
         Tristan Debeaupuis; modified from QWERTZ.DTD by
         Tom Gordon.
    
    <!entity % emph 
            " em|it|bf|sf|sl|tt|cparam " >
    
    <!entity % index "idx|cdx|nidx|ncdx" >
    
    <!-- url added by HG; htmlurl added by esr -->
    <!entity % xref
            " label|ref|pageref|cite|url|htmlurl|ncite " >
    
    <!entity % inline 
            " (#pcdata | f| x| %emph; |sq| %xref | %index | file )* " >
    
    <!entity % list 
            " list | itemize | enum | descrip " >
    
    <!entity % par       
            "  %list; | comment | lq | quote | tscreen " >
    
    <!entity % mathpar " dm | eq " >
    
    <!entity % thrm 
            " def | prop | lemma | coroll | proof | theorem " >
    
    <!entity % litprog " code | verb " >
    
    <!entity % sectpar 
            " %par; | figure | tabular | table | %mathpar; | 
              %thrm; | %litprog; ">
    <!element linuxdoc o o 
            (sect | chapt | article | report | 
             book | letter | telefax | slides | notes | manpage ) >
    
    <!-- `general' entity replaced with ISO entities - kwm -->
    <!entity % isoent system "isoent">
    %isoent;
    
    <!entity urlnam sdata "urlnam" >
    <!entity refnam sdata "refnam" >
    <!entity tex sdata "[tex   ]" >
    <!entity latex       sdata "[latex ]" >
    <!entity latexe      sdata "[latexe]" >
    <!entity tm     sdata "[trade ]" >
    <!entity dquot  sdata "[quot  ]" >
    <!entity ero    sdata "[amp   ]" >
    <!entity etago '</' >
    <!entity   Ae  '&Auml;' >
    <!entity   ae  '&auml;' >
    <!entity   Oe  '&Ouml;' >
    <!entity   oe  '&ouml;' >
    <!entity   Ue  '&Uuml;' >
    <!entity   ue  '&uuml;' >
    <!entity   sz  '&szlig;' >
    <!element  p o o (( %inline | %sectpar )+) +(newline) >
    <!entity ptag '<p>' >
    <!entity psplit '</p><p>' >
    
    <!shortref pmap
            "&#RS;B" null 
            "&#RS;B&#RE;" psplit
            "&#RS;&#RE;" psplit
    --      '"' qtag  --
            "[" lsqb
            "~" nbsp
            "_" lowbar
            "#" num
            "%" percnt
            "^" circ
            "{" lcub
            "}" rcub
            "|" verbar >
    
    <!usemap pmap p>
    <!element em - - (%inline)>
    <!element bf - - (%inline)>
    <!element it - - (%inline)>
    <!element sf - - (%inline)>
    <!element sl - - (%inline)>
    <!element tt - - (%inline)>
    <!element sq - - (%inline)>
    <!element cparam - - (%inline)>
    
    <!entity   ftag     '<f>'    -- formula begin -- >
    <!entity   qendtag  '</sq>'>
    
    <!shortref sqmap 
          "&#RS;B" null
    --      '"' qendtag  --
          "[" lsqb
          "~" nbsp
          "_" lowbar
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub
          "|" verbar >
    
    <!usemap   sqmap    sq >
    
    <!element lq - - (p*)>
    <!element quote - - ((%inline; | %sectpar;)*, p*)+ >
    <!element tscreen - - ((%inline; | %sectpar;)*, p*)+ >
    <!element itemize - - (item+)>
    <!element enum - - (item+)>
    <!element list - - (item+)>
    
    <!shortref desmap
            "&#RS;B" null
            "&#RS;B&#RE;" ptag
            "&#RS;&#RE;" ptag
            "~" nbsp
            "_" lowbar
            "#" num
            "%" percnt
            "^" circ
            "[" lsqb
            "]" rsqb
            "{" lcub
            "}" rcub
            "|" verbar >
    
    <!element descrip - - (tag?, p+)+ >
    <!usemap desmap descrip>
    
    <!element item o o ((%inline; | %sectpar;)*, p*) >
    
    <!element tag - o (%inline)>
    <!usemap desmap tag>
    
    <!usemap global (list,itemize,enum)>
    <!entity space " ">
    <!entity null "">
    
    <!--
    <!shortref bodymap
         "&#RS;B&#RE;" ptag
         "&#RS;&#RE;" ptag
          '"' qtag 
          "[" lsqb
          "~" nbsp
          "_" lowbar
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub
          "|" verbar>
    -->
    
    <!element figure - - ((eps | ph ), img*, caption?)>
    <!attlist figure
            loc cdata "tbp"
            caption cdata "Caption">
    
    <!-- eps attributes added by mb and td  -->
    <!element eps - o empty  >
    <!attlist eps
            file cdata #required
            height cdata "5cm"
            angle cdata "0">
    
    <!element ph - o empty >
    <!attlist ph
            vspace cdata #required>
    
    <!element img - o empty>
    <!attlist img
            src cdata #required>
    
    <!element caption - o (%inline)>
    
    <!shortref oneline
         "B&#RE;" space
         "&#RS;&#RE;" null 
         "&#RS;B&#RE;" null
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          "_" lowbar
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub
          "|" verbar>
    
    <!usemap oneline tag>
    <!usemap oneline caption>
    
    <!entity % tabrow "(%inline, (colsep, %inline)*)" >
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           (hline?, %tabrow, (rowsep, hline?, %tabrow)*, caption?) >
    
    <!attlist tabular
            ca cdata #required>
    
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    <!element colsep - o empty>
    <!element hline  - o empty>
    
    <!entity rowsep "<rowsep>">
    <!entity colsep "<colsep>">
    
    <!shortref tabmap
         "&#RE;" null
         "&#RS;&#RE;" null
         "&#RS;B&#RE;" null
         "&#RS;B" null
          "B&#RE;" null
          "BB"  space
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          "|" colsep 
          "[" ftag
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          "_" thinsp
          "~" nbsp
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub >
    
    <!usemap  tabmap tabular>
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    <!attlist table
            loc cdata "tbp">
    
    <!element code - - rcdata>
    <!element verb - - rcdata>
    
    <!shortref ttmap     -- also on one-line --
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            "&#RS;&#RE;" null 
            "&#RS;B&#RE;" null
            "&#RS;B" null
            '#'     num
            '%'     percnt
            '~'     tilde
            '_'     lowbar
            '^'     circ
            '{'     lcub
            '}'     rcub
            '|'     verbar >
    
    <!usemap ttmap  tt>
    <!element  mc  - - cdata >
    <!entity % sppos     "tu" >
    <!entity % fcs       "%sppos;|phr" >
    <!entity % fcstxt    "#pcdata|mc|%fcs;" >
    <!entity % fscs      "rf|v|fi" >
    <!entity % limits    "pr|in|sum" >
    <!entity % fbu       "fr|lim|ar|root" >
    <!entity % fph       "unl|ovl|sup|inf" >
    <!entity % fbutxt    "(%fbu;) | (%limits;) | 
                          (%fcstxt;)|(%fscs;)|(%fph;)" >
    <!entity % fphtxt    "p|#pcdata" >
    <!element  f        - - ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    
    <!entity   fendtag  '</f>'   -- formula end -- >
    
    <!shortref fmap 
          "&#RS;B" null
          "&#RS;B&#RE;" null
          "&#RS;&#RE;" null
          "_" thinsp
          "~" nbsp
          "]" rsqb
          "#" num
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          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub
          "|" verbar>
    
    <!usemap   fmap     f >
    
    <!element  dm       - - ((%fbutxt;)*)>
    <!element  eq       - - ((%fbutxt;)*)>
    
    <!shortref dmmap
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          "~" nbsp
          "]" rsqb
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
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    <!usemap dmmap (dm,eq)>
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    <!element  nu       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  de       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  ll       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  ul       o o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  opd      - o ((%fbutxt;)*) >
    <!element  pr       - - (ll,ul,opd?) >
    <!element  in       - - (ll,ul,opd?) >
    <!element  sum      - - (ll,ul,opd?) >
    <!element  lim      - - (op,ll,ul,opd?) >
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    <!attlist  root
            n cdata "">
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    <!element row o o (col, (arc, col)*) >
    
    <!element  ar       - - (row, (arr, row)*) >
    <!attlist  ar
        ca     cdata    #required >
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    <!element  arc      - o empty >
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    <!entity   arc "<arc>" >
    
    <!shortref arrmap
         "&#RE;" space
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          "|" arc 
          "_" thinsp
          "~" nbsp
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub >
    
    <!usemap   arrmap   ar >
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    <!element  fi  - o (#pcdata) >
    <!element  tu  - o empty >
    
    <!usemap global (rf,phr)>
    <!element def - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element prop - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element lemma - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element coroll - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element proof - - (p+) >
    <!element theorem - - (thtag?, p+) >
    <!element thtag - - (%inline)>
    
    <!usemap global (def,prop,lemma,coroll,proof,theorem)>
    <!usemap oneline thtag>
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    <!shortref global
          "&#RS;B" null  -- delete leading blanks --
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          "[" ftag
          "~" nbsp
          "_" lowbar
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub
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    <!usemap global linuxdoc>
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    <!-- ref modified to have an optional name field HG -->
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    <!attlist ref   
            id cdata #required
            name cdata "&refnam">
    
    <!-- url entity added to have direct url references HG -->
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            url cdata #required
            name cdata "&urlnam" >
    
    <!-- htmlurl entity added to have quieter url references esr -->
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            url cdata #required
            name cdata "&urlnam" >
    
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    <!attlist pageref
            id cdata #required>
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    <!-- Hacked by mdw to exclude abstract; abstract now part of titlepag -->
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    <!attlist article
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    <!-- Hacked by mdw to exclude abstract; abstract now part of titlepag -->
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    <!attlist book
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    <!-- Hacked by mdw, abstract now part of titlepag -->
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    <!element subtitle - o (%inline)>
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    <!usemap global thanks>
     
    <!element newline - o empty >
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    <!-- Hacked by mdw -->
    <!element abstract - o (%inline)>
    <!usemap oneline abstract>
    
    
    <!element toc - o empty>
    <!element lof - o empty>
    <!element lot - o empty>
    <!element header - - (lhead, rhead) >
    <!element lhead - o (%inline)>
    <!element rhead - o (%inline)>
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    <!element sect  - o (%sect, sect1*) +(footnote)>
    <!element sect1 - o (%sect, sect2*)>
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    <!element sect3 - o (%sect, sect4*)>
    <!element sect4 - o (%sect)>
    <!usemap oneline (chapt,sect,sect1,sect2,sect3,sect4)>
    <!element appendix - o empty >
    <!element footnote - - (%inline)>
    <!usemap global footnote>
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            id cdata #required>
    
    <!element ncite - o empty>
    <!attlist ncite 
            id cdata #required
            note cdata #required>
    
    <!element file - - (#pcdata)>
    
    <!element idx - - (#pcdata)>
    <!element cdx - - (#pcdata)>
    <!element nidx - - (#pcdata)>
    <!element ncdx - - (#pcdata)>
    
    <!element biblio - o empty>
    <!attlist biblio
            style cdata "linuxdoc"
            files cdata "">
    <!element slides - - (slide*) >
    
    <!attlist slides
            opts cdata "null">
    <!element slide - o (title?, p+) >
    <!entity  % addr "(address?, email?, phone?, fax?)" >  
            
    <!element letter - - 
            (from, %addr, to, %addr, cc?, subject?, sref?, rref?,
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    <!attlist letter
            opts cdata "null">
            
    <!element from               - o (#pcdata) >
    <!element to         - o (#pcdata) >
            
    <!usemap oneline (from,to)>
            
    <!element address    - o (#pcdata) +(newline) >
    <!element email              - o (#pcdata) >
    <!element phone              - o (#pcdata) >
    <!element fax                - o (#pcdata) >
            
    <!element subject    - o (%inline;) >
    <!element sref               - o (#pcdata) >
    <!element rref          - o (#pcdata) >
    <!element rdate         - o (#pcdata) >
            
    <!element opening    - o (%inline;) >
    <!usemap oneline opening>
            
    <!element closing - o (%inline;) >
    <!element cc - o (%inline;) +(newline) >
    <!element encl - o (%inline;) +(newline) >
            
    <!element ps - o (p+) >
    
    <!element telefax - - 
            (from, %addr, to, address, email?, 
             phone?, fax, cc?, subject?,
             opening, p+, closing, ps?)>
    
    <!attlist telefax
            opts cdata "null"
            length cdata "2">
    
    <!element notes - - (title?, p+) >
    <!attlist notes
            opts cdata "null" >
    <!element manpage - - (sect1*) 
            -(sect2 | f | %mathpar | figure | tabular | 
              table | %xref | %thrm )>
    
    
    <!attlist manpage
            opts cdata "null"
            title cdata ""
            sectnum cdata "1" >
    <!shortref manpage
          "&#RS;B" null
    --      '"' qtag  --
          "[" ftag
          "~" nbsp
          "_" lowbar
          "#" num
          "%" percnt
          "^" circ
          "{" lcub
          "}" rcub
          "|" verbar>
    
    <!usemap manpage  manpage >