<mapref>

A map reference is a mechanism for referencing a DITA map from a DITA map.

Usage information

The <mapref> element is a convenience element. It is equivalent to a <topicref> element with the @format attribute set to ditamap.

Processing expectations

The hierarchy of the referenced map is merged into the container map at the position of the reference, and the relationship tables of the child map are added to the parent map.

Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 06 August 2018

Should we make normative statements about the above points?

Discussed at DITA TC meeting on 02 July 2019.

Consensus: Yes, these need to be normative statements, but this is not the correct location. We need architectural topics that address processing of map hierarchy and relationship tables. This content should be located in the same chapter as the material about subjectScheme maps; it probably should absorb content currently in Processing > Navigation > TOC.

We should plan a review that covers both architectural and element-reference topics about maps.

Draft comment: robander 8 May 2026

There is a new architectural topic about maps that describes relationship tables, and says that the root map has the union of all relationship tables from submaps; we should reference that for the relationship table bit. It does not get "added" to the parent map, which might not be the root map.

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: This is at least the 4th spot we cover the relationship table info. This should be replaced with a link to the new relationship table topic in the map.
Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 05 September 2020

The terms "container map" and "parent map" here are unclear. How are they different?

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Ugh, we should be consistent, they mean the same thing, shouldn't we be saying referenced map / referencing map?

Specialization hierarchy

The <mapref> element is specialized from <topicref>. It is defined in the mapgroup-domain module.

Content model

<topicmeta>?, <data>**

Not contained by any element.

In order
  1. Optional <topicmeta>
  2. Zero or more Zero or more <data>

Not contained by any element.

Inheritance

+ map/topicref mapgroup-d/mapref

The <mapref> element is specialized from <topicref>. It is defined in the mapgroup-domain module.

Attributes

The following attributes are available on this element: common map attributes, link-relationship attributes, universal attributes, @impose-role, @keyref, and @keys.

For this element:
  • The @format attribute has a default value of ditamap.
  • The @impose-role attribute has a fixed value of keeptarget.

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

@cascade (common map attributes)

Specifies how metadata attributes cascade within a map. The specification defines the following values:

merge
Indicates that the metadata attributes cascade, and that the values of the metadata attributes are additive. This is the processing default for the @cascade attribute.
nomerge
Indicates that the metadata attributes cascade, but that they are not additive for <topicref> elements that specify a different value for a specific metadata attribute. If the cascading value for an attribute is already merged based on multiple ancestor elements, that merged value continues to cascade until a new value is encountered. That is, setting cascade="nomerge" does not undo merging that took place on ancestor elements.

Processors can also define custom, implementation-specific tokens for this attribute.

See Cascading of metadata attributes in a DITA map for more information about how this attribute interacts with metadata attributes.

@chunk (common map attributes)
Specifies how a processor should render a map or branch of a map. For example, it can be used to specify that individual topic documents should be rendered as a single document, or that a single document with multiple topics should be rendered as multiple documents.
The following values are valid:
combine
Instructs a processor to combine the referenced source documents for rendering purposes. This is intended for cases where a publishing process normally results in a single output artifact for each source XML document.
split
Instructs a processor to split each topic from the referenced source document into its own document for rendering purposes. This is intended for cases where a publishing process normally results in a single output artifact for each source XML document, regardless of how many DITA topics exist within each source document.

Processors can also define custom, implementation-specific tokens for this attribute.

For a detailed description of the @chunk attribute and its usage, see Chunking.

@collection-type (common map attributes)
Specifies how topics or links relate to each other. The processing default is unordered, although no default is specified in the OASIS-provided grammar files. The following values are valid:
unordered
Indicates that the order of the child topics is not significant.
sequence
Indicates that the order of the child topics is significant. Output processors will typically link between them in order.
choice
Indicates that one of the children should be selected.
family
Indicates a tight grouping in which each of the referenced topics not only relates to the current topic but also relate to each other.
Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 28 September 2022

Here is the content from the "DITA map attributes" topic:

@collection-type
The @collection-type attribute specifies how the children of a <topicref> element relate to their parent and to each other. This attribute, which is set on the parent element, typically is used by processors to determine how to generate navigation links in the rendered topics. For example, a @collection-type value of "sequence" indicates that children of the specifying <topicref> element represent an ordered sequence of topics; processors might add numbers to the list of child topics or generate next/previous links for online presentation. This attribute is available in topics on the <linklist> and <linkpool> elements, where it has the same behavior. Where the @collection-type attribute is available on elements that cannot directly contain elements, the behavior of the attribute is undefined.

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Make sure nothing here conflicts, and add a link from this to the architectural section

Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 28 September 2022

In the definitions of the supported values, do we want to refer to "resources" instead of "topics"? Since we specify that @collection-type specifies "how topics or links relate to each other" ...

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Good point, no strong feeling, but we should be consistent here, we already use "topics", "child topics", "children", and "referenced topics". Maybe:
  • Start with "Specifies how child topic references or links within the current element relate to each other"? Since this applies to children and we only sort of say that in the definitions of the tokens
  • When describing the tokens, maybe use "referenced resources", as in "Indicates that the order of the referenced resources is not significant"
@format (link-relationship attributes)
Specifies the format of the resource that is referenced. See The format attribute for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.
The @format attribute has a default value of ditamap.
@href (link-relationship attributes)
Specifies a reference to a resource. See The href attribute for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.
@impose-role
Specifies whether this element will impose its role on elements in a referenced map. The attribute is ignored if the target of the reference is not a map or branch of a map. The following values are valid:
keeptarget
The role of the current reference is not imposed on the target of the reference. This is the default for the unspecialized <topicref> element and for many convenience elements such as <keydef>.
impose
The role of the current reference is imposed on the target of the reference. For example, if a specialized topic reference <chapter> uses this value and references a map, a topic reference that resolves in place of the <chapter> will be treated as if it were a chapter.
-dita-use-conref-target
See Using the -dita-use-conref-target value for more information.

See The href attribute for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.

The @impose-role attribute has a fixed value of keeptarget.
@keyref
Specifies a key name that acts as a redirectable reference based on a key definition within a map. See Referencing a key with the keyref attribute for information on using this attribute.
Draft comment: robander
The definiton above for @keyref should be synchronized with the definition in the linked section on keys.

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Check the topic we link to and make sure this is consistent, then remove the draft comment

@keys
Specifies one or more names for a resource. See Setting key names with the keys attribute for information on using this attribute.
@keyscope (common map attributes)
Specifies that the element marks the boundaries of a key scope.

See The keyscope attribute for information on using this attribute.

Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 28 September 2022

Here is the content from the "DITA map attributes" topic:

@keyscope
Defines a new scope for key definition and resolution, and gives the scope one or more names. For more information about key scopes, see Indirect key-based addressing.
Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Double check each to make sure the latest content is consistent, and remove the draft comment

But also … it might be a good idea to keep this draft comment (and others for the keys/keyref stuff) until after that section is fully reviewed, so that we have an easy way to find these "content should be consistent" issues

@linking (common map attributes)
Specifies linking characteristics of a topic specific to the location of this reference in a map. If the value is not specified locally, the value might cascade from another element in the map (for cascade rules, see Cascading of metadata attributes in a DITA map).
Draft comment: robander Dec 28 2021
The text below matches 1.3 spec text but I'm nervous about "cannot link" type definition. It's describing how to generate links based on the current context in the map - it's not describing what the topic itself is allowed to link to, which is how I interpret "can".
Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Yeah we should remove the can/cannot and replace with a description of the intent here... like, targetonly "The topic or resource can be the target of any context based linking, but is not meant to be updated with links related to this context."

similarly, none could be "The topic or resource does not participate in any context-based linking"

The following values are valid:
targetonly
A topic can only be linked to and cannot link to other topics.
sourceonly
A topic cannot be linked to but can link to other topics.
normal
A topic can be linked to and can link to other topics. Use this to override the linking value of a parent topic.
none
A topic cannot be linked to or link to other topics.
-dita-use-conref-target
See Using the -dita-use-conref-target value for more information.
Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 28 September 2022

Here is the content from the "DITA map attributes" topic:

@linking

By default, the relationships between the topics that are referenced in a map are reciprocal:

  • Child topics link to parent topics and vice versa.
  • Next and previous topics in a sequence link to each other.
  • Topics in a family link to their sibling topics.
  • Topics referenced in the table cells of the same row in a relationship table link to each other. A topic referenced within a table cell does not (by default) link to other topics referenced in the same table cell.

This behavior can be modified by using the @linking attribute, which enables an author or information architect to specify how a topic participates in a relationship. The following values are valid:

linking="none"
Specifies that the topic does not exist in the map for the purposes of calculating links.
linking="sourceonly"
Specifies that the topic will link to its related topics but not vice versa.
linking="targetonly"
Specifies that the related topics will link to it but not vice versa.
linking="normal"
Default value. It specifies that linking will be reciprocal (the topic will link to related topics, and they will link back to it).

Authors also can create links directly in a topic by using the <xref> or <link> elements, but in most cases map-based linking is preferable, because links in topics create dependencies between topics that can hinder reuse.

Note that while the relationships between the topics that are referenced in a map are reciprocal, the relationships merely imply reciprocal links in generated output that includes links. The rendered navigation links are a function of the presentation style that is determined by the processor.

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Ensure there is nothing conflicting, and add a link from here to the more architectural info that gives all the details

@processing-role (common map attributes)
Specifies whether the referenced resource is processed normally or treated as a resource that is only included in order to resolve references, such as key or content references. The following values are valid:
normal
Indicates that the resource is a readable part of the information set. It is included in navigation and search results. This is the default value for the <topicref> element.
resource-only
Indicates that the resource should be used only for processing purposes. It is not included in navigation or search results, nor is it rendered as a topic. This is the default value for the <keydef> element.
-dita-use-conref-target
See Using the -dita-use-conref-target value for more information.

If no value is specified but the attribute is specified on a containing element within a map or within the related-links section, the value cascades from the closest containing element.

@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 The scope attribute for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.

Specifies whether the target is available for searching. If the value is not specified locally, the value might cascade from another element in the map (for cascade rules, see Cascading of metadata attributes in a DITA map). The following values are valid: yes, no, and -dita-use-conref-target.
Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 28 September 2022

Here is the content from the "DITA map attributes" topic:

@search
Specifies whether the topic is included in search indexes.

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: Update to use the same description, these are very similar but not exact. If the description is this short and similar it should be reused with conref.

@subjectrefs (common map attributes)
Specifies one or more keys that are each defined by a subject definition in a subject scheme map. Multiple values are separated by white space.
@toc (common map attributes)
Specifies whether a topic appears in the table of contents (TOC) based on the current map context. If the value is not specified locally, the value might cascade from another element in the map (for cascade rules, see Cascading of metadata attributes in a DITA map). The following values are valid:
yes
The topic appears in a generated TOC.
no
The topic does not appear in a generated TOC.
-dita-use-conref-target
See Using the -dita-use-conref-target value for more information.
Draft comment: Kristen J Eberlein 28 September 2022

Here is the content from the "DITA map attributes" topic:

@toc
Specifies whether topics are excluded from navigation output, such as a Web site map or an online table of contents. By default, <topicref> hierarchies are included in navigation output; relationship tables are excluded.

Draft comment: robander
TO RESOLVE 13 May 2026: I read that and kind of hate "web site map". Kind of think we should delete that bit from the other topic, and replace the first sentence there with a reused sentence from here.

@type (link-relationship attributes)
Describes the target of a reference. See The type attribute for detailed information on supported values and processing implications.

Example

This section is non-normative.

The following code sample shows how a <mapref> element can be used to reference a submap. The base-elements.ditamap document references the map-group-elements.ditamap):

<map>
 <title>Base elements</title>
 <!-- ... -->
 <topicref href="containers/domain-elements.dita" >
  <!-- ... -->
  <mapref href="map-group-elements.ditamap"/>
  <!-- ... -->
 </topicref>
 <!-- ... -->
</map>

The map-group-elements.ditamap document contains references to the element-reference topics for the map group domain. It is constructed as a map in order to enable easy editing of the child topics.

<map>
 <title>Map group elements</title>
 <topicref keyref="mapgroup-d" >
  <topicref keyref="keydef" />
  <topicref keyref="mapref" />
  <topicref keyref="topicgroup" />
  <topicref keyref="topichead" />
 </topicref>
</map>

After processing, the base-elements.ditamap contains the topic references that originally were located in the submap:

<map>
 <title>Base elements</title>
 <!-- ... -->
 <topicref href="containers/domain-elements.dita" >
  <!-- ... -->
  <topicref keyref="mapgroup-d" >
    <topicref keyref="keydef" />
    <topicref keyref="mapref" />
    <topicref keyref="topicgroup" />
    <topicref keyref="topichead" />
  </topicref>
  <!-- ... -->
 </topicref>
 <!-- ... -->
</map>