Conditional processing attributes
The metadata attributes specify properties of the content that can be used to determine how the content should be processed. Specialized metadata attributes can be defined to enable specific business-processing needs, such as semantic processing and data mining.
Metadata attributes typically are used for the following purposes:
- Filtering content based on the attribute values, for example, to suppress or publish profiled content
- Flagging content based on the attribute values, for example, to highlight specific content on output
- Performing custom processing, for example, to extract business-critical data and store it in a database
Typically @audience, @platform, @product,
@otherprops, @props, @deliveryTarget, and
specializations of the @props attributes are used for filtering; the same
attributes plus the @rev attribute are used for flagging. The
@status and @importance attributes, as well as custom
attributes specialized from @base, are used for application-specific
behavior, such as identifying metadata to aid in search and retrieval.
Filtering and flagging attributes
The following conditional-processing attributes are available on most elements:
@product- The product that is the subject of the discussion.
@platform- The platform on which the product is deployed.
@audience- The intended audience of the content.
@deliveryTarget- The intended delivery target of the content, for example
"html", "pdf", or "epub". This attribute is a replacement for the now deprecated
@printattribute.The
@deliveryTargetattribute is specialized from the@propsattribute. It is defined in the deliveryTargetAttDomain, which is integrated into all OASIS-provided document-type shells. If this domain is not integrated into a given document-type shell, the@deliveryTargetattribute will not be available. @rev- The revision or draft number of the current document. (This is used only for flagging.)
@otherprops- Other properties that do not require semantic identification.
@props- A generic conditional processing attribute that can be specialized to create new semantic conditional-processing attributes.
Other metadata attributes
Other attributes are still considered metadata on an element, but they are not designed for filtering or flagging.
@importance- The degree of priority of the content. This attribute takes a single value from an enumeration.
@status- The current state of the content. This attribute takes a single value from an enumeration.
@base- A generic attribute that has no specific purpose, but is intended to act as the basis for specialized attributes that have a simple value syntax like the conditional processing attributes (one or more alphanumeric values separated by whitespace or parenthesized groups of values).
@outputclass- Provides a label on one or more element instances, typically to specify a role or
other semantic distinction. As the
@outputclassattribute does not provide a formal type declaration or the structural consistency of specialization, it should be used sparingly, usually only as a temporary measure while a specialization is developed. For example,<uicontrol>elements that define button labels could be distinguished by adding an@outputclassattribute:
The value of the<uicontrol outputclass="button">Cancel</uicontrol>@outputclassattribute can be used to trigger XSLT or CSS rules, while providing a mapping to be used for future migration to a more specialized set of user interface elements.