bibliorelation — The relationship of a document to another
phrase (db._phrase)replaceable
altanchorannotationbibliorefindexterm (db.indexterm.endofrange)indexterm (db.indexterm.singular)indexterm (db.indexterm.startofrange)inlinemediaobjectlinkolinkremarksubscriptsuperscriptxrefCommon attributes and common linking attributes.
Additional attributes:
Required attributes are shown in bold.
The bibliorelation element satisfies the relation element of the Dublin Core Metadata Initiative.
The Dublin Core defines relation as “a reference to a related resource.” It goes on to note that “recommended best practice is to reference the resource by means of a string or number conforming to a formal identification system.”
DocBook 4.2 added bibliocoverage, bibliorelation, and bibliosource to make the DocBook meta-information wrappers a complete superset of the Dublin Core.
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
Identifies the kind of bibliographic identifier
| Enumerated values: | |
|---|---|
| “doi” |
A document object identifier. |
| “isbn” |
An international standard book number. |
| “isrn” |
An international standard technical report number (ISO 10444). |
| “issn” |
An international standard serial number. |
| “libraryofcongress” |
A Library of Congress reference number. |
| “pubsnumber” |
A publication number (an internal number or possibly organizational standard). |
| “uri” |
A Uniform Resource Identifier |
Identifies the kind of bibliographic identifier
| Enumerated values: | |
|---|---|
| “other” |
Indicates that the identifier is some 'other' kind. |
Identifies the nature of the non-standard bibliographic identifier
A keyword that identififes the type of the non-standard relationship
Identifies the type of relationship
| Enumerated values: | |
|---|---|
| “hasformat” |
The described resource pre-existed the referenced resource, which is essentially the same intellectual content presented in another format |
| “haspart” |
The described resource includes the referenced resource either physically or logically |
| “hasversion” |
The described resource has a version, edition, or adaptation, namely, the referenced resource |
| “isformatof” |
The described resource is the same intellectual content of the referenced resource, but presented in another format |
| “ispartof” |
The described resource is a physical or logical part of the referenced resource |
| “isreferencedby” |
The described resource is referenced, cited, or otherwise pointed to by the referenced resource |
| “isreplacedby” |
The described resource is supplanted, displaced, or superceded by the referenced resource |
| “isrequiredby” |
The described resource is required by the referenced resource, either physically or logically |
| “isversionof” |
The described resource is a version, edition, or adaptation of the referenced resource; changes in version imply substantive changes in content rather than differences in format |
| “references” |
The described resource references, cites, or otherwise points to the referenced resource |
| “replaces” |
The described resource supplants, displaces, or supersedes the referenced resource |
| “requires” |
The described resource requires the referenced resource to support its function, delivery, or coherence of content |
Identifies the type of relationship
| Enumerated values: | |
|---|---|
| “othertype” |
The described resource has a non-standard relationship with the referenced resource |
These elements contain bibliorelation: 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 bibliorelation: text, alt, anchor, annotation, biblioref, indexterm (db.indexterm.endofrange), indexterm (db.indexterm.singular), indexterm (db.indexterm.startofrange), inlinemediaobject, link, olink, phrase (db._phrase), remark, replaceable, subscript, superscript, xref.