part

$Revision: 1.3 $

$Date: 2002/06/12 11:18:21 $

part — A division in a book

Synopsis

Content Model

part ::=
(beginpage?,partinfo?,
 (title,subtitle?,titleabbrev?),
 partintro?,
 (appendix|chapter|toc|lot|index|glossary|bibliography|article|
  preface|refentry|reference)+)

Attributes

Common attributes

Name

Type

Default

status CDATA None
label CDATA None

Description

Parts segment a book into divisions. Each division can contain a number of component-level elements, such as Chapters.

Processing expectations

Formatted as a displayed block. Parts almost always introduce a forced page break. Sometimes starts on the next recto page. Frequently, they also produce a part separator page, on which may be printed the content of the PartIntro.

Future Changes

In DocBook V4.0, the ToC element in the content model will be replaced by TocChap.

Parents

These elements contain part: book.

Attributes

label

Label specifies an identifying string for presentation purposes. The first Part in a Book might be labeled “Part I”, for example.

Generally, an explicit Label attribute is used only if the processing system is incapable of generating the label automatically. If present, the Label is normative; it will used even if the processing system is capable of automatic labelling.

status

Status identifies the editorial or publication status of the Part.

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).

See Also

appendix, article, book, chapter, colophon, dedication, partintro, preface, set.

Examples

The following example comes from Java in a Nutshell:

<!DOCTYPE part PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.1.2//EN"
          "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.1.2/docbookx.dtd">
<part label="II">
<title>Programming with the Java API</title>
<partintro>
<para>
The sections in Part II present real-world examples of 
programming with Java.  You can study and learn from the
examples, and you can adapt them for use in your own programs.
</para>

<para>
The example code in these chapters is available for downloading.  
See <systemitem role="url">http://www.ora.com/catalog/books/javanut</systemitem>.
</para>

<literallayout>
<xref linkend="jnut-ch-04"/>
<xref linkend="jnut-ch-05"/>
<xref linkend="jnut-ch-06"/>
<xref linkend="jnut-ch-07"/>
<xref linkend="jnut-ch-08"/>
<xref linkend="jnut-ch-09"/>
</literallayout>
</partintro>
<chapter id="jnut-ch-04"><title/><para>...</para></chapter>
<chapter id="jnut-ch-05"><title/><para>...</para></chapter>
<chapter id="jnut-ch-06"><title/><para>...</para></chapter>
<chapter id="jnut-ch-07"><title/><para>...</para></chapter>
<chapter id="jnut-ch-08"><title/><para>...</para></chapter>
<chapter id="jnut-ch-09"><title/><para>...</para></chapter>
</part>