bridgehead — A free-floating heading
bridgehead ::= (text | Bibliography inlines | Error inlines | Graphic inlines | GUI inlines | Indexing inlines | Keyboard inlines | Linking inlines | Markup inlines | Math inlines | Object-oriented programming inlines | Operating system inlines | Product inlines | Programming inlines | Publishing inlines | Technical inlines | Ubiquitous inlines)*
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
Additional attributes:
At most one of:
renderas
(enumeration) = “sect1” | “sect2” | “sect3” | “sect4” |
“sect5”
All or none of:
renderas
(enumeration) = “other”
otherrenderas
(NMTOKEN)
Some documents, usually legacy documents, use headings that are
not tied to the normal sectional hierarchy. These headings may be
represented in DocBook with the bridgehead
element.
A bridgehead
may also be useful in fiction or
journalistic works that don’t have a nested hierarchy.
A bridgehead
is formatted as a block, using
the same display properties as the section heading which it
masquerades as. The renderas
attribute controls which heading it mimics.
Common attributes and common linking attributes.
Identifies the nature of the nonstandard rendering
Indicates how the bridge head should be rendered
Enumerated values: | |
---|---|
“sect1” | Render as a first-level section. |
“sect2” | Render as a second-level section. |
“sect3” | Render as a third-level section. |
“sect4” | Render as a fourth-level section. |
“sect5” | Render as a fifth-level section. |
Indicates how the bridge head should be rendered
Enumerated values: | |
---|---|
“other” | Identifies a nonstandard rendering |