bibliomset — A cooked container for related bibliographic information
*:*abstractaddressartpagenumsauthorauthorgroupauthorinitialsbibliocoveragebiblioidbibliomiscbibliomsetbibliorelationbibliosetbibliosourcecitebiblioidciterefentrycitetitlecollabconfgroupcontractnumcontractsponsorcopyrightcovereditioneditorextendedlinkissuenumitermsetkeywordsetlegalnoticemediaobjectorgorgnameothercreditpagenumspersonpersonblurbpersonnamephrase (db._phrase)printhistoryproductnameproductnumberpubdatepublisherpublishernamereleaseinforeplaceablerevhistoryseriesvolnumssubjectsetsubtitletitletitleabbrevvolumenum
abbrevacronymcorefdateemphasis (db.emphasis)firsttermfootnotefootnoterefforeignphraseglosstermphrase (db.phrase)quotesubscriptsuperscriptwordasword
altanchorannotationbibliorefindexterm (db.indexterm.endofrange)indexterm (db.indexterm.singular)indexterm (db.indexterm.startofrange)inlinemediaobjectlinkolinkremarksubscriptsuperscriptxrefA bibliomset is a “cooked” wrapper for a collection of bibliographic information.
The purpose of this wrapper is to assert the relationship that binds the collection. For example, in a bibliomixed entry for an article in a journal, you might use two bibliomsets to wrap the fields related to the article and the fields related to the journal.
Formatted as a displayed block.
A bibliomset is “cooked.” In addition to named fields, it can contain interspersed text to provide punctuation and other formatting information.
The processing system is generally expected to present each and every element in the set, all interspersed #PCDATA, in the order in which it occurs.
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
Identifies the relationship between the bibliographic elemnts
These elements contain bibliomset: biblioentry, bibliomixed, bibliomset, biblioset, info (db.info), info (db.titleforbidden.info), info (db.titleonly.info), info (db.titleonlyreq.info), info (db.titlereq.info).
The following elements occur in bibliomset: text, *:*, abbrev, abstract, acronym, address, alt, anchor, annotation, artpagenums, author, authorgroup, authorinitials,
bibliocoverage, biblioid, bibliomisc, bibliomset, biblioref, bibliorelation, biblioset, bibliosource, citebiblioid, citerefentry, citetitle, collab, confgroup, contractnum, contractsponsor, copyright, coref, cover, date, edition, editor, emphasis (db.emphasis), extendedlink, firstterm, footnote, footnoteref, foreignphrase, glossterm, indexterm (db.indexterm.endofrange), indexterm (db.indexterm.singular), indexterm (db.indexterm.startofrange), inlinemediaobject, issuenum, itermset, keywordset, legalnotice, link, mediaobject, olink, org, orgname, othercredit, pagenums, person, personblurb, personname, phrase (db._phrase), phrase (db.phrase), printhistory, productname, productnumber, pubdate, publisher,
publishername, quote, releaseinfo, remark, replaceable, revhistory, seriesvolnums, subjectset, subscript, subtitle, superscript, title, titleabbrev,
volumenum, wordasword, xref.
<bibliography xmlns='http://docbook.org/ns/docbook'>
<title>Example bibliomset</title>
<bibliomixed>
<bibliomset relation='article'>Walsh, Norman.
<title role='article'>Introduction to Cascading Style Sheets</title>.
</bibliomset>
<bibliomset relation='journal'>
<title>The World Wide Web Journal</title>
<volumenum>2</volumenum><issuenum>1</issuenum>.
<publishername>O'Reilly & Associates, Inc.</publishername> and
The World Wide Web Consortium. Winter, 1996.
</bibliomset>
</bibliomixed>
</bibliography>