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I am testing something, oh yes indeedy I am, I wouldn't be putting this here if I weren't testing *something*. However, if you think I'm going to tell you what it is, you're nuts.
5 responses total.
As with entity declarations, element declarations form part of
the document type declaration subset that follows the document
type name and any optional-external-identifier in the DOCTYPE
declaration. Each element is declared within its own set of
markup delimiters, the reserved name ELEMENT (or its previously
declared replacement) being used to identify the declaration as
an element declaration.
In its shortest form an element declaration takes the form:
<!ELEMENT name contents>
where 'name' is a generic identifier that uniquely identifies
an element of that document and 'contents' is either a formal
declaration of the type of data that may be entered within the
element, or a content model showing which subelements can be
embedded within the element.
More than one element name can be associated with a declared
set of contents by use of a name group in place of the generic
identifier. Like the name group used in the short reference
use declaration described in Chapter 4, the group consists of
a set of connected element names bracketed by group open and
group close sequences.
ummm.....right
just makin' sure
This response has been erased.
Is he still around?
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- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss