NSGMLS(1) General Commands Manual NSGMLS(1)
NAME
nsgmls - a validating SGML parser
An System Conforming to
International Standard ISO 8879 --
Standard Generalized Markup Language
SYNOPSIS
nsgmls [ -BCdeglprsuv ] [ -alinktype ] [ -b(bctf|encoding) ] [ -Ddirectory ] [ -Emax_errors ] [ -ffile ] [ -iname ] [ -msysid ] [ -oout-
put_option ] [ -tfile ] [ -wwarning_type ] [ sysid... ]
WARNING
This manual page may be out of date. Consult the HTML documentation for the most up-to-date information concerning this program. You can
find the HTML document in: /usr/share/doc/sp/nsgmls.htm
DESCRIPTION
Nsgmls parses and validates the document whose document entity is specified by the system identifiers sysid... and prints on the standard
output a simple text representation of its Element Structure Information Set. (This is the information set which a structure-controlled
conforming application should act upon.) The form of system identifiers is described in detail below; a system identifier that does not
start with < and does not look like an absolute URL will be treated as a filename. If more than one system identifier is specified, then
the corresponding entities will be concatenated to form the document entity. Thus the document entity may be spread amongst several files;
for example, the SGML declaration, prolog and document instance set could each be in a separate file. If no system identifiers are speci-
fied, then nsgmls will read the document entity from the standard input. A command line system identifier of - can be used to refer to the
standard input. (Normally in a system identifier, <osfd>0 is used to refer to standard input.)
The following options are available:
-alinktype
Make link type linktype active. Not all ESIS information is output in this case: the active LPDs are not explicitly reported,
although each link attribute is qualified with its link type name; there is no information about result elements; when there are
multiple link rules applicable to the current element, nsgmls always chooses the first.
-b(bctf|encoding)
This determines the encoding used for output. If in fixed character set mode it specifies the name of an encoding; if not, it speci-
fies the name of a BCTF. See the description below of the bctf storage manager attribute for more information.
-B Batch mode. Parse each sysid... specified on the command line separately, rather than concatenating them. This is useful mainly with
-s.
If -tfilename is also specified, then the specified filename will be prefixed to the sysid to make the filename for the RAST result
for each sysid.
-C The filename... arguments specify catalog files rather than the document entity. The document entity is specified by the first
DOCUMENT entry in the catalog files.
-Ddirectory
Search directory for files specified in system identifiers. Multiple -D options are allowed. See the description of the osfile
storage manager for more information about file searching.
-e Describe open entities in error messages. Error messages always include the position of the most recently opened external entity.
-E max_errors
Nsgmls will exit after max_errors errors. If max_errors is 0, there is no limit on the number of errors. The default is 200.
-ffile Redirect errors to file. This is useful mainly with shells that do not support redirection of stderr.
-g Show the GIs of open elements in error messages.
-iname Pretend that
<!ENTITY % name "INCLUDE">
occurs at the start of the document type declaration subset in the document entity. Since repeated definitions of an entity are
ignored, this definition will take precedence over any other definitions of this entity in the document type declaration. Multiple
-i options are allowed. If the declaration replaces the reserved name INCLUDE then the new reserved name will be the replacement
text of the entity. Typically the document type declaration will contain
<!ENTITY % name "IGNORE">
and will use %name; in the status keyword specification of a marked section declaration. In this case the effect of the option will
be to cause the marked section not to be ignored.
-msysid
Map public identifiers and entity names to system identifiers using the catalog entry file whose system identifier is sysid. Multi-
ple -m options are allowed. If there is a catalog entry file called catalog in the same place as the document entity, it will be
searched for immediately after those specified by -m.
-ooutput_option
Output additional information accordig to output_option:
entity Output definitions of all general entities not just for data or subdoc entities that are referenced or named in an ENTITY or
ENTITIES attribute.
id Distinguish attributes whose declared value is ID.
line Output L commands giving the current line number and filename.
included
Output an i command for included subelements.
Multiple -o options are allowed.
-p Parse only the prolog. Nsgmls will exit after parsing the document type declaration. Implies -s.
-s Suppress output. Error messages will still be printed.
-tfile Output to file the RAST result as defined by ISO/IEC 13673:1995 (actually this isn't quite an IS yet; this implements the Intermedi-
ate Editor's Draft of 1994/08/29, with changes to implement ISO/IEC JTC1/SC18/WG8 N1777). The normal output is not produced.
-v Print the version number.
-wtype Control warnings and errors. Multiple -w options are allowed. The following values of type enable warnings:
mixed Warn about mixed content models that do not allow #pcdata anywhere.
sgmldecl
Warn about various dubious constructions in the SGML declaration.
should Warn about various recommendations made in ISO 8879 that the document does not comply with. (Recommendations are expressed
with ``should'', as distinct from requirements which are usually expressed with ``shall''.)
default
Warn about defaulted references.
duplicate
Warn about duplicate entity declarations.
undefined
Warn about undefined elements: elements used in the DTD but not defined.
unclosed
Warn about unclosed start and end-tags.
empty Warn about empty start and end-tags.
net Warn about net-enabling start-tags and null end-tags.
min-tag
Warn about minimized start and end-tags. Equivalent to combination of unclosed, empty and net warnings.
unused-map
Warn about unused short reference maps: maps that are declared with a short reference mapping declaration but never used in a
short reference use declaration in the DTD.
unused-param
Warn about parameter entities that are defined but not used in a DTD.
all Warn about conditions that should usually be avoided (in the opinion of the author). Equivalent to: mixed, should, default,
undefined, sgmldecl, unused-map, unused-param, empty and unclosed.
A warning can be disabled by using its name prefixed with no-. Thus -wall -wno-duplicate will enable all warnings except those
about duplicate entity declarations.
The following values for warning_type disable errors:
no-idref
Do not give an error for an ID reference value which no element has as its ID. The effect will be as if each attribute
declared as an ID reference value had been declared as a name.
no-significant
Do not give an error when a character that is not a significant character in the reference concrete syntax occurs in a lit-
eral in the SGML declaration. This may be useful in conjunction with certain buggy test suites.
The following options are also supported for backwards compatibility with sgmls:
-d Same as -wduplicate.
-l Same as -oline.
-r Same as -wdefault.
-u Same as -wundef.
System identifiers
A system identifier can either be a formal system identifier or a simple system identifier. A system identifier that is a formal system
identifier consists of a sequence of one or more storage object specifications. The objects specified by the storage object specifications
are concatenated to form the entity. A storage object specification consists of an SGML start-tag in the reference concrete syntax fol-
lowed by character data content. The generic identifier of the start-tag is the name of a storage manager. The content is a storage
object identifier which identifies the storage object in a manner dependent on the storage manager. The start-tag can also specify
attributes giving additional information about the storage object. Numeric character references are recognized in storage object identi-
fiers and attribute value literals in the start-tag. Record ends are ignored in the storage object identifier as with SGML. A system
identifier will be interpreted as a formal system identifier if it starts with a < followed by a storage manager name, followed by either >
or white-space; otherwise it will be interpreted as a simple system identifier. A storage object identifier extends until the end of the
system identifier or until the first occurrence of < followed by a storage manager name, followed by either > or white-space.
The following storage managers are available:
osfile The storage object identifier is a filename. If the filename is relative it is resolved using a base filename. Normally the base
filename is the name of the file in which the storage object identifier was specified, but this can be changed using the base
attribute. The filename will be searched for first in the directory of the base filename. If it is not found there, then it will
be searched for in directories specified with the -D option in the order in which they were specified on the command line, and then
in the list of directories specified by the environment variable SGML_SEARCH_PATH. The list is separated by colons under Unix and
by semi-colons under MSDOS.
osfd The storage object identifier is an integer specifying a file descriptor. Thus a system identifier of <osfd>0 will refer to the
standard input.
url The storage object identifier is a URL. Only the http scheme is currently supported and not on all systems.
neutral
The storage manager is the storage manager of storage object in which the system identifier was specified (the underlying storage
manager). However if the underlying storage manager does not support named storage objects (ie it is osfd), then the storage man-
ager will be osfile. The storage object identifier is treated as a relative, hierarchical name separated by slashes (/) and will be
transformed as appropriate for the underlying storage manager.
The following attributes are supported:
records
This describes how records are delimited in the storage object:
cr Records are terminated by a carriage return.
lf Records are terminated by a line feed.
crlf Records are terminated by a carriage return followed by a line feed.
find Records are terminated by whichever of cr, lf or crlf is first encountered in the storage object.
asis No recognition of records is performed.
The default is find except for NDATA entities for which the default is asis.
When records are recognized in a storage object, a record start is inserted at the beginning of each record, and a record end at the
end of each record. If there is a partial record (a record that doesn't end with the record terminator) at the end of the entity,
then a record start will be inserted before it but no record end will be inserted after it.
The attribute name and = can be omitted for this attribute.
zapeof This specifies whether a Control-Z character that occurs as the final byte in the storage object should be stripped. The following
values are allowed:
zapeof A final Control-Z should be stripped.
nozapeof
A final Control-Z should not be stripped.
The default is zapeof except for NDATA entities, entities declared in storage objects with zapeof=nozapeof and storage objects with
records=asis.
The attribute name and = can be omitted for this attribute.
bctf The bctf (bit combination transformation format) attribute describes how the bit combinations of the storage object are transformed
into the sequence of bytes that are contained in the object identified by the storage object identifier. This inverse of this
transformation is performed when the entity manager reads the storage object. It has one of the following values:
identity
Each bit combination is represented by a single byte.
fixed-2
Each bit combination is represented by exactly 2 bytes, with the more significant byte first.
utf-8 Each bit combination is represented by a variable number of bytes according to UCS Transformation Format 8 defined in Annex P
to be added by the first proposed drafted amendment (PDAM 1) to ISO/IEC
10646-1:1993.
euc-jp Each bit combination is treated as a pair of bytes, most significant byte first, encoding a character using the
Extended_UNIX_Code_Fixed_Width_for_Japanese Internet charset, and is transformed into the variable length sequence of octets
that would encode that character using the Extended_UNIX_Code_Packed_Format_for_Japanese Internet charset.
sjis Each bit combination is treated as a pair of bytes, most significant byte first, encoding a character using the
Extended_UNIX_Code_Fixed_Width_for_Japanese Internet charset, and is transformed into the variable length sequence of bytes
that would encode that character using the Shift_JIS Internet charset.
unicode
Each bit combination is represented by 2 bytes. The bytes representing the entire storage object may be preceded by a pair
of bytes representing the byte order mark character (0xFEFF). The bytes representing each bit combination are in the system
byte order, unless the byte order mark character is present, in which case the order of its bytes determines the byte order.
When the storage object is read, any byte order mark character is discarded.
is8859-N
N can be any single digit other than 0. Each bit combination is interpreted as the number of a character in ISO/IEC 10646
and is represented by the single byte that would encode that character in ISO 8859-N. These values are not supported with
the -b option.
Values other than identity are supported only with the multi-byte version of nsgmls.
tracking
This specifies whether line boundaries should be tracked for this object: a value of track specifies that they should; a value of
notrack specifies that they should not. The default value is track. Keeping track of where line boundaries occur in a storage
object requires approximately one byte of storage per line and it may be desirable to disable this for very large storage objects.
The attribute name and = can be omitted for this attribute.
base When the storage object identifier specified in the content of the storage object specification is relative, this specifies the base
storage object identifier relative to which that storage object identifier should be resolved. When not specified a storage object
identifier is interpreted relative to the storage object in which it is specified, provided that this has the same storage manager.
This applies both to system identifiers specified in SGML documents and to system identifiers specified in the catalog entry files.
smcrd The value is a single character that will be recognized in storage object identifiers (both in the content of storage object speci-
fications and in the value of base attributes) as a storage manager character reference delimiter when followed by a digit. A stor-
age manager character reference is like an SGML numeric character reference except that the number is interpreted as a character
number in the inherent character set of the storage manager rather than the document character set. The default is for no character
to be recognized as a storage manager character reference delimiter. Numeric character references cannot be used to prevent recog-
nition of storage manager character reference delimiters.
fold This applies only to the neutral storage manager. It specifies whether the storage object identifier should be folded to the cus-
tomary case of the underlying storage manager if storage object identifiers for the underlying storage manager are case sensitive.
The following values are allowed:
fold The storage object identifier will be folded.
nofold The storage object identifier will not be folded.
The default value is fold. The attribute name and = can be omitted for this attribute.
For example, on Unix filenames are case-sensitive and the customary case is lower-case. So if the underlying storage manager were
osfile and the system was a Unix system, then <neutral>FOO.SGM would be equivalent to <osfile>foo.sgm.
A simple system identifier is interpreted as a storage object identifier with a storage manager that depends on where the system identifier
was specified: if it was specified in a storage object whose storage manager was url or if the system identifier looks like an absolute URL
in a supported scheme, the storage manager will be url; otherwise the storage manager will be osfile. The storage manager attributes are
defaulted as for a formal system identifier. Numeric character references are not recognized in simple system identifiers.
System identifier generation
The entity manager generates an effective system identifier for every external entity using catalog entry files in the format defined by
SGML Open Technical Resolution 9401:1994. The entity manager will give an error if it is unable to generate an effective system identifier
for an external entity. Normally if the external identifier for an entity includes a system identifier then the entity manager will use
that as the effective system identifier for the entity; this behaviour can be changed using OVERRIDE or SYSTEM entries in a catalog entry
file.
A catalog entry file contains a sequence of entries in one of the following forms:
PUBLIC pubid sysid
This specifies that sysid should be used as the effective system identifier if the public identifier is pubid. Sysid is a system
identifier as defined in ISO 8879 and pubid is a public identifier as defined in ISO 8879.
ENTITY name sysid
This specifies that sysid should be used as the effective system identifier if the entity is a general entity whose name is name.
ENTITY %name sysid
This specifies that sysid should be used as the effective system identifier if the entity is a parameter entity whose name is name.
Note that there is no space between the % and the name.
DOCTYPE name sysid
This specifies that sysid should be used as the effective system identifier if the entity is an entity declared in a document type
declaration whose document type name is name.
LINKTYPE name sysid
This specifies that sysid should be used as the effective system identifier if the entity is an entity declared in a link type dec-
laration whose link type name is name.
NOTATION name sysid
This specifies that sysid should be used as the effective system identifier for a notation whose name is name. This is an extension
to the SGML Open format. This is relevant only with the -n option.
OVERRIDE YES|NO
This sets the overriding mode for entries up to the next occurrence of OVERRIDE or the end of the catalog entry file. At the begin-
ning of a catalog entry file the overriding mode will be NO. A PUBLIC, ENTITY, DOCTYPE, LINKTYPE or NOTATION entry with an overrid-
ing mode of YES will be used whether or not the external identifier has an explicit system identifier; those with an overriding mode
of NO will be ignored if external identifier has an explicit system identifier. This is an extension to the SGML Open format.
SYSTEM sysid1 sysid2
This specifies that sysid2 should be used as the effective system identifier if the system identifier specified in the external
identifier was sysid1. This is an extension to the SGML Open format.
SGMLDECL sysid
This specifies that if the document does not contain an SGML declaration, the SGML declaration in sysid should be implied.
DOCUMENT sysid
This specifies that the document entity is sysid. This entry is used only with the -C option.
CATALOG sysid
This specifies that sysid is the system identifier of an additional catalog entry file to be read after this one. Multiple CATALOG
entries are allowed and will be read in order. This is an extension to the SGML Open format.
The delimiters can be omitted from the sysid provided it does not contain any white space. Comments are allowed between parameters delim-
ited by -- as in SGML.
The environment variable SGML_CATALOG_FILES contains a list of catalog entry files. The list is separated by colons under Unix and by
semi-colons under MSDOS. These will be searched after any catalog entry files specified using the -m option, and after the catalog entry
file called catalog in the same place as the document entity. If this environment variable is not set, then a system dependent list of
catalog entry files will be used. In fact catalog entry files are not restricted to being files: the name of a catalog entry file is
interpreted as a system identifier.
A match in one catalog entry file will take precedence over any match in a later catalog entry file. A match in a catalog entry file for a
SYSTEM entry will take precedence over a match in the same file for a PUBLIC, ENTITY, DOCTYPE, LINKTYPE or NOTATION entry. A match in a
catalog entry file for a PUBLIC entry will take precedence over a match in the same file for an ENTITY, DOCTYPE, LINKTYPE or NOTATION
entry.
System declaration
The system declaration for nsgmls is as follows:
SYSTEM "ISO 8879:1986"
CHARSET
BASESET "ISO 646-1983//CHARSET
International Reference Version (IRV)//ESC 2/5 4/0"
DESCSET 0 128 0
CAPACITY PUBLIC "ISO 8879:1986//CAPACITY Reference//EN"
FEATURES
MINIMIZE DATATAG NO OMITTAG YES RANK YES SHORTTAG YES
LINK SIMPLE YES 65535 IMPLICIT YES EXPLICIT YES 1
OTHER CONCUR NO SUBDOC YES 100 FORMAL YES
SCOPE DOCUMENT
SYNTAX PUBLIC "ISO 8879:1986//SYNTAX Reference//EN"
SYNTAX PUBLIC "ISO 8879:1986//SYNTAX Core//EN"
VALIDATE
GENERAL YES MODEL YES EXCLUDE YES CAPACITY NO
NONSGML YES SGML YES FORMAL YES
SDIF
PACK NO UNPACK NO
The limit for the SUBDOC parameter is memory dependent.
Any legal concrete syntax may be used.
declaration
If the declaration is omitted and there is no applicable SGMLDECL entry in a catalog, the following declaration will be implied:
<!SGML "ISO 8879:1986"
CHARSET
BASESET "ISO 646-1983//CHARSET
International Reference Version (IRV)//ESC 2/5 4/0"
DESCSET 0 9 UNUSED
9 2 9
11 2 UNUSED
13 1 13
14 18 UNUSED
32 95 32
127 1 UNUSED
CAPACITY PUBLIC "ISO 8879:1986//CAPACITY Reference//EN"
SCOPE DOCUMENT
SYNTAX
SHUNCHAR CONTROLS 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 127 255
BASESET "ISO 646-1983//CHARSET International Reference Version
(IRV)//ESC 2/5 4/0"
DESCSET 0 128 0
FUNCTION RE 13
RS 10
SPACE 32
TAB SEPCHAR 9
NAMING LCNMSTRT ""
UCNMSTRT ""
LCNMCHAR "-."
UCNMCHAR "-."
NAMECASE GENERAL YES
ENTITY NO
DELIM GENERAL SGMLREF
SHORTREF SGMLREF
NAMES SGMLREF
QUANTITY SGMLREF
ATTCNT 99999999
ATTSPLEN 99999999
DTEMPLEN 24000
ENTLVL 99999999
GRPCNT 99999999
GRPGTCNT 99999999
GRPLVL 99999999
LITLEN 24000
NAMELEN 99999999
PILEN 24000
TAGLEN 99999999
TAGLVL 99999999
FEATURES
MINIMIZE DATATAG NO
OMITTAG YES
RANK YES
SHORTTAG YES
LINK SIMPLE YES 1000
IMPLICIT YES
EXPLICIT YES 1
OTHER CONCUR NO
SUBDOC YES 99999999
FORMAL YES
APPINFO NONE>
with the exception that all characters that are neither significant not shunned will be assigned to DATACHAR.
A character in a base character set is described either by giving its number in a universal character set, or by specifying a minimum lit-
eral. The constraints on the choice of universal character set are that characters that are significant in the SGML reference concrete
syntax must be in the universal character set and must have the same number in the universal character set as in ISO 646 and that each
character in the character set must be represented by exactly one number; that character numbers in the range 0 to 31 and 127 to 159 are
control characters (for the purpose of enforcing SHUNCHAR CONTROLS). It is recommended that ISO 10646 (Unicode) be used as the universal
character set, except in environments where the normal document character sets are large character set which cannot be compactly described
in terms of ISO 10646. The public identifier of a base character set can be associated with an entity that describes it by using a PUBLIC
entry in the catalog entry file. The entity must be a fragment of an SGML declaration consisting of the portion of a character set
description, following the DESCSET keyword, that is, it must be a sequence of character descriptions, where each character description
specifies a described character number, the number of characters and either a character number in the universal character set, a minimum
literal or the keyword UNUSED. Character numbers in the universal character set can be as big as 99999999.
In addition nsgmls has built in knowledge of a few character sets. These are identified using the designating sequence in the public iden-
tifier. The following designating sequences are recognized:
Designating ISO Minimum Number
Escape Registration Character of Description
Sequence Number Number Characters
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ESC 2/5 4/0 - 0 128 full set of ISO 646 IRV
ESC 2/8 4/0 2 0 128 G0 set of ISO 646 IRV
ESC 2/8 4/2 6 0 128 G0 set of ASCII
ESC 2/1 4/0 1 0 32 C0 set of ISO 646
The graphic character sets do not strictly include C0 and C1 control character sets. For convenience, nsgmls augments the graphic charac-
ter sets with the appropriate control character sets.
It is not necessary for every character set used in the SGML declaration to be known to nsgmls provided that characters in the document
character set that are significant both in the reference concrete syntax and in the described concrete syntax are described using known
base character sets and that characters that are significant in the described concrete syntax are described using the same base character
sets or the same minimum literals in both the document character set description and the syntax reference character set description.
The public identifier for a public concrete syntax can be associated with an entity that describes using a PUBLIC entry in the catalog
entry file. The entity must be a fragment of an SGML declaration consisting of a concrete syntax description starting with the SHUNCHAR
keyword as in an SGML declaration. The entity can also make use of the following extensions:
An added function can be expressed as a parameter literal instead of a name.
The replacement for a reference reserved name can be expressed as a parameter literal instead of a name.
The LCNMSTRT, UCNMSTRT, LCNMCHAR and UCNMCHAR keywords may each be followed by more than one parameter literal. A sequence of
parameter literals has the same meaning as a single parameter literal whose content is the concatenation of the content of each of
the literals in the sequence. This extension is useful because of the restriction on the length of a parameter literal in the SGML
declaration to 240 characters.
The total number of characters specified for UCNMCHAR or UCNMSTRT may exceed the total number of characters specified for LCNMCHAR
or LCNMSTRT respectively. Each character in UCNMCHAR or UCNMSTRT which does not have a corresponding character in the same position
in LCNMCHAR or LCNMSTRT is simply assigned to UCNMCHAR or UCNMSTRT without making it the upper-case form of any character.
A parameter following any of LCNMSTRT, UCNMSTRT, LCNMCHAR and UCNMCHAR keywords may be followed by the name token ... and another
parameter literal. This has the same meaning as the two parameter literals with a parameter literal in between containing in order
each character whose number is greater than the number of the last character in the first parameter literal and less than the number
of the first character in the second parameter literal. A parameter literal must contain at least one character for each ... to
which it is adjacent.
A number may be used as a parameter following the LCNMSTRT, UCNMSTRT, LCNMCHAR and UCNMCHAR keywords or as a delimiter in the DELIM
section with the same meaning as a parameter literal containing just a numeric character reference with that number.
The parameters following the LCNMSTRT, UCNMSTRT, LCNMCHAR and UCNMCHAR keywords may be omitted. This has the same meaning as speci-
fying an empty parameter literal.
Within the specification of the short reference delimiters, a parameter literal containing exactly one character may be followed by
the name token ... and another parameter literal containing exactly one character. This has the same meaning as a sequence of
parameter literals one for each character number that is greater than or equal to the number of the character in the first parameter
literal and less than or equal to the number of the character in the second parameter literal.
The public identifier for a public capacity set can be associated with an entity that describes using a PUBLIC entry in the catalog entry
file. The entity must be a fragment of an SGML declaration consisting of a sequence of capacity names and numbers.
Output format
The output is a series of lines. Lines can be arbitrarily long. Each line consists of an initial command character and one or more argu-
ments. Arguments are separated by a single space, but when a command takes a fixed number of arguments the last argument can contain spa-
ces. There is no space between the command character and the first argument. Arguments can contain the following escape sequences.
\ A .
A record end character.
| Internal SDATA entities are bracketed by these.
nn The character whose code is nnn octal.
A record start character will be represented by 12. Most applications will need to ignore 12 and translate
into newline.
#n; The character whose number is n in decimal. n can have any number of digits. This is used for characters that are not repre-
sentable by the encoding translation used for output (as specified by the NSGML_CODE environment variable). This will only occur
with the multibyte version of nsgmls.
The possible command characters and arguments are as follows:
(gi The start of an element whose generic identifier is gi. Any attributes for this element will have been specified with A commands.
)gi The end of an element whose generic identifier is gi.
-data Data.
&name A reference to an external data entity name; name will have been defined using an E command.
?pi A processing instruction with data pi.
Aname val
The next element to start has an attribute name with value val which takes one of the following forms:
IMPLIED
The value of the attribute is implied.
CDATA data
The attribute is character data. This is used for attributes whose declared value is CDATA.
NOTATION nname
The attribute is a notation name; nname will have been defined using a N command. This is used for attributes whose declared
value is NOTATION.
ENTITY name...
The attribute is a list of general entity names. Each entity name will have been defined using an I, E or S command. This
is used for attributes whose declared value is ENTITY or ENTITIES.
TOKEN token...
The attribute is a list of tokens. This is used for attributes whose declared value is anything else.
ID token
The attribute is an ID value. This will be output only if the -oid option is specified. Otherwise TOKEN will be used for ID
values.
Dename name val
This is the same as the A command, except that it specifies a data attribute for an external entity named ename. Any D commands
will come after the E command that defines the entity to which they apply, but before any & or A commands that reference the entity.
atype name val
The next element to start has a link attribute with link type type, name name, and value val, which takes the same form as with the
A command.
Nnname nname. Define a notation. This command will be preceded by a p command if the notation was declared with a public identifier, and
by a s command if the notation was declared with a system identifier. If the -n option was specified, this command will also be
preceded by an f command giving the system identifier generated by the entity manager (unless it was unable to generate one). A
notation will only be defined if it is to be referenced in an E command or in an A command for an attribute with a declared value of
NOTATION.
Eename typ nname
Define an external data entity named ename with type typ (CDATA, NDATA or SDATA) and notation not. This command will be preceded by
an f command giving the system identifier generated by the entity manager (unless it was unable to generate one), by a p command if
a public identifier was declared for the entity, and by a s command if a system identifier was declared for the entity. not will
have been defined using a N command. Data attributes may be specified for the entity using D commands. If the -oentity option is
not specified, an external data entity will only be defined if it is to be referenced in a & command or in an A command for an
attribute whose declared value is ENTITY or ENTITIES.
Iename typ text
Define an internal data entity named ename with type typ and entity text text. The typ will be CDATA or SDATA unless the -oentity
option was specified, in which case it can also be PI or TEXT (for an text entity). If the -oentity option is not specified, an
internal data entity will only be defined if it is referenced in an A command for an attribute whose declared value is ENTITY or
ENTITIES.
Sename Define a subdocument entity named ename. This command will be preceded by an f command giving the system identifier generated by
the entity manager (unless it was unable to generate one), by a p command if a public identifier was declared for the entity, and by
a s command if a system identifier was declared for the entity. If the -oentity option is not specified, a subdocument entity will
only be defined if it is referenced in a { command or in an A command for an attribute whose declared value is ENTITY or ENTITIES.
Tename Define an external SGML text entity named ename. This command will be preceded by an f command giving the system identifier gener-
ated by the entity manager (unless it was unable to generate one), by a p command if a public identifier was declared for the
entity, and by a s command if a system identifier was declared for the entity. This command will be output only if the -oentity
option is specified.
ssysid This command applies to the next E, S, T or N command and specifies the associated system identifier.
ppubid This command applies to the next E, S, T or N command and specifies the associated public identifier.
fsysid This command applies to the next E, S, T or, if the -n option was specified, N command and specifies the system identifier generated
by the entity manager from the specified external identifier and other information about the entity or notation.
{ename The start of the subdocument entity ename; ename will have been defined using a S command.
}ename The end of the subdocument entity ename.
Llineno file
Llineno
Set the current line number and filename. The file argument will be omitted if only the line number has changed. This will be out-
put only if the -l option has been given.
#text An APPINFO parameter of text was specified in the declaration. This is not strictly part of the ESIS, but a structure-controlled
application is permitted to act on it. No # command will be output if APPINFO NONE was specified. A # command will occur at most
once, and may be preceded only by a single L command.
C This command indicates that the document was a conforming document. If this command is output, it will be the last command. An
document is not conforming if it references a subdocument entity that is not conforming.
ENVIRONMENT
SP_BCTF
If this is set to one of identity, utf-8, euc-jp and sjis, then that BCTF will be used as the default BCTF for everything (including
file input, file output, message output, filenames and command line arguments).
SEE ALSO
The Handbook, Charles F. Goldfarb
ISO 8879 (Standard Generalized Markup Language), International Organization for Standardization
More complete HTML documentation can be found in: /usr/share/doc/sp/index.htm
BUGS
Only with -t is all ESIS information for LINK is reported.
AUTHOR
James Clark (jjc@jclark.com).
NSGMLS(1)