<edited>

The <edited> element contains detailed information about a book edit, such as the revision that was edited, who completed the edit, and when the edit occurred.

Specialization hierarchy

The <edited> element is specialized from <data>. It is defined in the bookmap module.

Content model

( <organization> | <person> )*, <revisionid> ?, <started> ?, <completed> ?, <summary> ?, ( <data> | <sort-as> )*

In order
  1. Zero or more
  2. Optional <revisionid>
  3. Optional <started>
  4. Optional <completed>
  5. Optional <summary>
  6. Zero or more
    • <data>
    • <sort-as>

Attributes

The following attributes are available on this element: data-element attributes, link-relationship attributes, and universal attributes.

The following attributes are available on this element: universal attributes and the attributes defined below.

@datatype (data-element attributes)
Specifies the type of data contained in the @value attribute or within the <data> element. A typical use of @datatype will be the identifying URI for an XML Schema datatype.
@format (link-relationship attributes)
Specifies the format of the resource that is referenced. See STUB CONTENT for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.
@href (link-relationship attributes)
Specifies a reference to a resource. See STUB CONTENT for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.
@name (data-element attributes)
Defines a unique name for the object.
@scope (link-relationship attributes)
Specifies the closeness of the relationship between the current document and the referenced resource. The following values are valid: local, peer, external, and -dita-use-conref-target.

See STUB CONTENT for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.

@type (link-relationship attributes)
Describes the target of a reference. See STUB CONTENT for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.
@value (data-element attributes)
Specifies a value associated with the current property or element.

Example

This section is non-normative.

The following code sample shows how the <edited> element can be used to show which revisions of the book were edited, who completed the edits, and when the edits occurred:

<bookmeta>
  <bookchangehistory>
    <reviewed>
      <revisionid>2</revisionid>
      <started><year>2019</year><month>10</month></started>
      <completed><year>2020</year><month>01</month></completed>
    </reviewed>
   <edited>
      <revisionid>1</revisionid>
      <person>Joe T. Editor</person>
      <completed><year>2020</year><month>03</month><day>15</day></completed>
    </edited>
    <edited>
      <revisionid>2</revisionid>
      <person>Joe T. Editor</person>
      <completed><year>2023</year><month>06</month><day>30</day></completed>
    </edited>
  </bookchangehistory>
</bookmeta>