$Revision$
$Date$
refsect3 — A subsection of a RefSect2
refsect3 ::= (refsect3info
?, (title
,subtitle
?,titleabbrev
?), (calloutlist
|glosslist
|bibliolist
|itemizedlist
|orderedlist
|segmentedlist
|simplelist
|variablelist
|caution
|important
|note
|tip
|warning
|literallayout
|programlisting
|programlistingco
|screen
|screenco
|screenshot
|synopsis
|cmdsynopsis
|funcsynopsis
|classsynopsis
|fieldsynopsis
|constructorsynopsis
|destructorsynopsis
|methodsynopsis
|formalpara
|para
|simpara
|address
|blockquote
|graphic
|graphicco
|mediaobject
|mediaobjectco
|informalequation
|informalexample
|informalfigure
|informaltable
|equation
|example
|figure
|table
|msgset
|procedure
|sidebar
|qandaset
|task
|productionset
|constraintdef
|anchor
|bridgehead
|remark
|highlights
|abstract
|authorblurb
|epigraph
|indexterm
|beginpage
)+)
Name |
Type |
Default |
status | CDATA | None |
A RefSect3
is a third level section in a
RefEntry
, analogous to a Sect3
elsewhere
in the document. See RefSect1
.
In DocBook, RefSect3
is the lowest-level section allowed in a
RefEntry
. There is no element analogous to a Sect4
.
The following elements occur in refsect3:
abstract
, address
, anchor
, authorblurb
, beginpage
, bibliolist
, blockquote
, bridgehead
, calloutlist
, caution
, classsynopsis
, cmdsynopsis
, constraintdef
, constructorsynopsis
, destructorsynopsis
, epigraph
, equation
, example
, fieldsynopsis
, figure
, formalpara
, funcsynopsis
, glosslist
, graphic
, graphicco
, highlights
, important
, indexterm
, informalequation
, informalexample
, informalfigure
, informaltable
, itemizedlist
, literallayout
, mediaobject
, mediaobjectco
, methodsynopsis
, msgset
, note
, orderedlist
, para
, procedure
, productionset
, programlisting
, programlistingco
, qandaset
, refsect3info
, remark
, screen
, screenco
, screenshot
, segmentedlist
, sidebar
, simpara
, simplelist
, subtitle
, synopsis
, table
, task
, tip
, title
, titleabbrev
, variablelist
, warning
.
Status
identifies the editorial or publication
status of the RefSect3
.
Publication status might be used to control formatting (for example, printing a “draft” watermark on drafts) or processing (perhaps a document with a status of “final” should not include any components that are not final).