W3C

XHTML Basic 1.1

W3C Recommendation 29 July 2008

This version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xhtml-basic-20080729
Latest version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-basic
Previous version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/PR-xhtml-basic-20080611
Diff-marked from previous version:
xhtml-basic-diff.html
Diff-marked from previous Recommendation:
xhtml-basic-rec-diff.html
Version 1.1 Editors:
Shane McCarron, Applied Testing and Technology, Inc.
Masayasu Ishikawa, (until March 2007 while at W3C)
Editors:
Mark Baker, Sun Microsystems
Masayasu Ishikawa, (until March 2007 while at W3C)
Shinichi Matsui, Panasonic
Peter Stark, Ericsson
Ted Wugofski, Openwave Systems
Toshihiko Yamakami, ACCESS Co., Ltd.

Please refer to the errata for this document, which may include some normative corrections.

See also translations.

This document is also available in these non-normative formats: PostScript version, PDF version, ZIP archive, and Gzip'd TAR archive.


Abstract

The XHTML Basic document type includes the minimal set of modules required to be an XHTML host language document type, and in addition it includes images, forms, basic tables, and object support. It is designed for Web clients that do not support the full set of XHTML features; for example, Web clients such as mobile phones, PDAs, pagers, and settop boxes. The document type is rich enough for content authoring.

XHTML Basic is designed as a common base that may be extended. The goal of XHTML Basic is to serve as a common language supported by various kinds of user agents.

This revision, 1.1, supercedes version 1.0 as defined in http://www.w3.org/TR/2000/REC-xhtml-basic-20001219. In this revision, several new features have been incorporated into the language in order to better serve the small-device community that is this language's major user:

  1. XHTML Forms (defined in [XHTMLMOD])
  2. Intrinsic Events (defined in [XHTMLMOD])
  3. The value attribute for the li element (defined in [XHTMLMOD])
  4. The target attribute (defined in [XHTMLMOD])
  5. The style element (defined in [XHTMLMOD])
  6. The style attribute (defined in [XHTMLMOD])
  7. XHTML Presentation module (defined in [XHTMLMOD])
  8. The inputmode attribute (defined in Section 5 of this document)

The document type definition is implemented using XHTML modules as defined in "XHTML Modularization" [XHTMLMOD].

Status of this Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document is a W3C Recommendation and supersedes the 19 December 2000 version of the XHTML Basic Recommendation. It reflects cross-industry agreement on a set of markup language features that allows authors to create rich Web content deliverable to a wide range of devices.

This document has been produced by the W3C XHTML2 Working Group as part of the W3C HTML Activity. Please see the Working Group's implementation report. A diff-marked version against the Proposed Recommendation is available. A diff-marked version against the 19 December 2000 Recommendation is also available.

Please send comments about this document to [email protected] (archive). It is inappropriate to send discussion email to this address. Public discussion may take place on [email protected] (archive).

This document has been reviewed by W3C Members, by software developers, and by other W3C groups and interested parties, and is endorsed by the Director as a W3C Recommendation. It is a stable document and may be used as reference material or cited from another document. W3C's role in making the Recommendation is to draw attention to the specification and to promote its widespread deployment. This enhances the functionality and interoperability of the Web.

This document was produced by a group operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

1.1. XHTML for Small Information Appliances

HTML 4 is a powerful language for authoring Web content, but its design does not take into consideration issues pertinent to small devices, including the implementation cost (in power, memory, etc.) of the full feature set. Consumer devices with limited resources cannot generally afford to implement the full feature set of HTML 4. Requiring a full-fledged computer for access to the World Wide Web excludes a large portion of the population from consumer device access of online information and services.

Because there are many ways to subset HTML, there are many almost identical subsets defined by organizations and companies. Without a common base set of features, developing applications for a wide range of Web clients is difficult.

The motivation for XHTML Basic is to provide an XHTML document type that can be shared across communities (e.g. desktop, TV, and mobile phones), and that is rich enough to be used for simple content authoring. New community-wide document types can be defined by extending XHTML Basic in such a way that XHTML Basic documents are in the set of valid documents of the new document type. Thus an XHTML Basic document can be presented on the maximum number of Web clients.

The document type definition for XHTML Basic is implemented based on the XHTML modules defined in XHTML Modularization [XHTMLMOD].

For information on best practices for mobile content, we refer you to [MOBILEBP].

1.2. Background and Requirements

Information appliances are targeted for particular uses. They support the features they need for the functions they are designed to fulfill. The following are examples of different information appliances:

Existing subsets and variants of HTML for these clients include Compact HTML [CHTML], the Wireless Markup Language [WML], and the "HTML 4.0 Guidelines for Mobile Access" [GUIDELINES]. The common features found in these document types include:

This set of HTML features has been the starting point for the design of XHTML Basic. Since many content developers are familiar with these HTML features, they comprise a useful host language that may be combined with markup modules from other languages according to the methods described in "XHTML Modularization" [XHTMLMOD]. For example, XHTML Basic may be extended with a custom module to support richer markup semantics in specific environments.

It is not the intention of XHTML Basic to limit the functionality of future languages. But since the features in HTML 4 (frames, advanced tables, etc.) were developed for a desktop computer type of client, they have proved to be inappropriate for many non-desktop devices. XHTML Basic will be extended and built upon. Extending XHTML from a common and basic set of features, instead of almost identical subsets or the too-large set of functions in HTML 4, will be good for interoperability on the Web, as well as for scalability.

Compared to the rich functionality of HTML 4, XHTML Basic may look like one step back, but in fact, it is two steps forward for clients that do not need what is in HTML 4 and for content developers who get one XHTML subset instead of many.

1.3. Design Rationale

This section explains why certain HTML features are not part of XHTML Basic.

1.3.1. Presentation

Many simple Web clients cannot display fonts other than monospace. Bi-directional text, bold faced font, and other text extension elements are not supported.

It is recommended that style sheets be used to create a presentation that is appropriate for the device.

1.3.2. Tables

Basic XHTML tables ([XHTMLMOD], section 5.6.1) are supported, but tables can be difficult to display on small devices. It is recommended that content developers follow the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 for creating accessible tables ([WCAG10], Guideline 5). Note that in the Basic Tables Module, nesting of tables is prohibited.

1.3.3. Frames

Frames are not supported. Frames depend on a screen interface and may not be applicable to some small appliances like phones, pagers, and watches.

2. Conformance

This section is normative.

2.1. Document Conformance

A Conforming XHTML Basic document is a document that requires only the facilities described as mandatory in this specification. Such a document must meet all of the following criteria:

  1. The document must conform to the constraints expressed in Appendix B .
  2. The root element of the document must be <html>.
  3. The name of the default namespace on the root element must be the XHTML namespace name, http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml.
  4. There must be a DOCTYPE declaration in the document prior to the root element. If present, the public identifier included in the DOCTYPE declaration must reference the DTD found in Appendix B using its Formal Public Identifier. The system identifier may be modified appropriately.
    <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML Basic 1.1//EN"
        "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-basic/xhtml-basic11.dtd">
    
  5. The DTD subset must not be used to override any parameter entities in the DTD.

XHTML Basic 1.1 documents SHOULD be labeled with the Internet Media Type "application/xhtml+xml" as defined in [RFC3236]. For further information on using media types with XHTML, see the informative note [XHTMLMIME].

2.2. User Agent Conformance

The user agent must conform to the "User Agent Conformance" section of the XHTML 1.0 specification ([XHTML1], section 3.2).

3. The XHTML Basic Document Type

This section is normative.

The XHTML Basic document type is defined as a set of XHTML modules. All XHTML modules are defined in the "XHTML Modularization" specification [XHTMLMOD].

XHTML Basic consists of the following XHTML modules:

Structure Module*
body, head, html, title
Text Module*
abbr, acronym, address, blockquote, br, cite, code, dfn, div, em, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, kbd, p, pre, q, samp, span, strong, var
Hypertext Module*
a
List Module*
dl, dt, dd, ol, ul, li
Forms Module
button, fieldset, form, input, label, legend, select, optgroup, option, textarea
Basic Tables Module
caption, table, td, th, tr
Image Module
img
Object Module
object, param
Presentation module
b, big, hr, i, small, sub, sup, tt
Metainformation Module
meta
Link Module
link
Base Module
base
Intrinsic Events module
Events attributes
Scripting module
script and noscript elements
Stylesheet module
style element
Style Attribute Module Deprecated
style attribute
Target Module
target attribute.

Note:

  1. The target attribute is designed to be a general hook for binding to an external environment (such as Frames, multiple windows, browser-tabbed windows); when there is no such external environment bound to the user agent, the user agent can ignore the target attribute. When there is an external environment bound, the conformance requirements for the target attribute are defined in each environment.
  2. The content author needs to be aware that the user agent behavior for the target attribute depends on multiple factors such as the existence of an environment binding, restrictions of available resources, existence of other applications and user preferences (such as pop-up blockers), and implemententation-dependent design decisions. When there is no external environmental conformance, it is recommended that authors do not depend on use of the target attribute.
  3. It should be noted that any implementation-dependent use of the target attribute might impede interoperability.

(*) = This module is a required XHTML Host Language module.

XHTML Basic also uses the XHTML inputmode Attribute Module, as defined in this specification. This module adds the inputmode attribute to the input and textarea elements of the XHTML Forms Module.

Finally, XHTML Basic adds the value attribute to the li element of the XHTML List Module.

An XML 1.0 DTD is available in Appendix B.

4. How to Use XHTML Basic

Although XHTML Basic can be used as it is - a simple XHTML language with text, links, and images - the intention of its simple design is for use as a host language. A host language can contain a mix of vocabularies all rolled into one document type. It is natural that XHTML is the host language, since that is what most Web developers are used to.

When markup from other languages is added to XHTML Basic, the resulting document type will be an extension of XHTML Basic. Content developers can develop for XHTML Basic or take advantage of the extensions. The goal of XHTML Basic is to serve as a common language supported by various kinds of user agents.

5. XHTML inputmode Attribute Module

This section is normative.

This section was originally a component of XForms 1.0, and was written by Martin Duerst.

The inputmode Attribute Module defines the inputmode attribute.

inputmode = CDATA
This attribute specifies style information for the current element.

The following table shows additional attributes for elements defined elsewhere when the inputmode module is selected.

Elements Attributes Notes
input& inputmode (CDATA) When the Basic Forms or Forms Module is selected.
textarea& inputmode (CDATA) When the Basic Forms or Forms Module is selected.

The attribute inputmode provides a hint to the user agent to select an appropriate input mode for the text input expected in an associated form control. The input mode may be a keyboard configuration, an input method editor (also called front end processor) or any other setting affecting input on the device(s) used.

Using inputmode, the author can give hints to the agent that make form input easier for the user. Authors should provide inputmode attributes wherever possible, making sure that the values used cover a wide range of devices.

5.1 inputmode Attribute Value Syntax

The value of the inputmode attribute is a white space separated list of tokens. Tokens are either sequences of alphabetic letters or absolute URIs. The later can be distinguished from the former by noting that absolute URIs contain a ':'. Tokens are case-sensitive. All the tokens consisting of alphabetic letters only are defined in this specification, in 5.3 List of Tokens (or a successor of this specification).

This specification does not define any URIs for use as tokens, but allows others to define such URIs for extensibility. This may become necessary for devices with input modes that cannot be covered by the tokens provided here. The URI should dereference to a human-readable description of the input mode associated with the use of the URI as a token. This description should describe the input mode indicated by this token, and whether and how this token modifies other tokens or is modified by other tokens.

5.2 User Agent Behavior

Upon entering an empty form control with an inputmode attribute, the user agent should select the input mode indicated by the inputmode attribute value. User agents should not use the inputmode attribute to set the input mode when entering a form control with text already present. To set the appropriate input mode when entering a form control that already contains text, user agents should rely on platform-specific conventions.

User agents should make available all the input modes which are supported by the (operating) system/device(s) they run on/have access to, and which are installed for regular use by the user. This is typically only a small subset of the input modes that can be described with the tokens defined here.

Note:

Additional guidelines for user agent implementation are found at [UAAG 1.0].

The following simple algorithm is used to define how user agents match the values of an inputmode attribute to the input modes they can provide. This algorithm does not have to be implemented directly; user agents just have to behave as if they used it. The algorithm is not designed to produce "obvious" or "desirable" results for every possible combination of tokens, but to produce correct behavior for frequent token combinations and predictable behavior in all cases.

First, each of the input modes available is represented by one or more lists of tokens. An input mode may correspond to more than one list of tokens; as an example, on a system set up for a Greek user, both "greek upperCase" and "user upperCase" would correspond to the same input mode. No two lists will be the same.

Second, the inputmode attribute is scanned from front to back. For each token t in the inputmode attribute, if in the remaining list of tokens representing available input modes there is any list of tokens that contains t, then all lists of tokens representing available input modes that do not contain t are removed. If there is no remaining list of tokens that contains t, then t is ignored.

Third, if one or more lists of tokens are left, and they all correspond to the same input mode, then this input mode is chosen. If no list is left (meaning that there was none at the start) or if the remaining lists correspond to more than one input mode, then no input mode is chosen.

Example: Assume the list of lists of tokens representing the available input modes is: {"cyrillic upperCase", "cyrillic lowerCase", "cyrillic", "latin", "user upperCase", "user lowerCase"}, then the following inputmode values select the following input modes: "cyrillic title" selects "cyrillic", "cyrillic lowerCase" selects "cyrillic lowerCase", "lowerCase cyrillic" selects "cyrillic lowerCase", "latin upperCase" selects "latin", but "upperCase latin" does select "cyrillic upperCase" or "user upperCase" if they correspond to the same input mode, and does not select any input mode if "cyrillic upperCase" and "user upperCase" do not correspond to the same input mode.

5.3 List of Tokens

Tokens defined in this specification are separated into two categories: Script tokens and modifiers. In inputmode attributes, script tokens should always be listed before modifiers.

5.3.1 Script Tokens

Script tokens provide a general indication the set of characters that is covered by an input mode. In most cases, script tokens correspond directly to [Unicode Scripts]. Some tokens correspond to the block names in Java class java.lang.Character.UnicodeBlock ([Java Unicode Blocks]) or Unicode Block names. However, this neither means that an input mode has to allow input for all the characters in the script or block, nor that an input mode is limited to only characters from that specific script. As an example, a "latin" keyboard doesn't cover all the characters in the Latin script, and includes punctuation which is not assigned to the Latin script. The version of the Unicode Standard that these script names are taken from is 3.2.

Input Mode Token Comments
arabic Unicode script name
armenian Unicode script name
bengali Unicode script name
bopomofo Unicode script name
braille used to input braille patterns (not to indicate a braille input device)
buhid Unicode script name
canadianAboriginal Unicode script name
cherokee Unicode script name
cyrillic Unicode script name
deseret Unicode script name
devanagari Unicode script name
ethiopic Unicode script name
georgian Unicode script name
greek Unicode script name
gothic Unicode script name
gujarati Unicode script name
gurmukhi Unicode script name
han Unicode script name
hangul Unicode script name
hanja Subset of 'han' used in writing Korean
hanunoo Unicode script name
hebrew Unicode script name
hiragana Unicode script name (may include other Japanese scripts produced by conversion from hiragana)
ipa International Phonetic Alphabet
kanji Subset of 'han' used in writing Japanese
kannada Unicode script name
katakana Unicode script name (full-width, not half-width)
khmer Unicode script name
lao Unicode script name
latin Unicode script name
malayalam Unicode script name
math mathematical symbols and related characters
mongolian Unicode script name
myanmar Unicode script name
ogham Unicode script name
oldItalic Unico de script name
oriya Unicode script name
runic Unicode script name
simplifiedHanzi Subset of 'han' used in writing Simplified Chinese
sinhala Unicode script name
syriac Unicode script name
tagalog Unicode script name
tagbanwa Unicode script name
tamil Unicode script name
telugu Unicode script name
thaana Unicode script name
thai Unicode script name
tibetan Unicode script name
traditionalHanzi Subset of 'han' used in writing Traditional Chinese
user Special value denoting the 'native' input of the user (e.g. to input her name or text in her native language).
yi Unicode script name

5.3.2 Modifier Tokens

Modifier tokens can be added to the scripts they apply in order to more closely specify the kind of characters expected in the form control. Traditional PC keyboards do not need most modifier tokens (indeed, users on such devices would be quite confused if the software decided to change case on its own; CAPS lock for upperCase may be an exception). However, modifier tokens can be very helpful to set input modes for small devices.

Input Mode Token Comments
lowerCase lowercase (for bicameral scripts)
upperCase uppercase (for bicameral scripts)
titleCase title case (for bicameral scripts): words start with an upper case letter
startUpper start input with one uppercase letter, then continue with lowercase letters
digits digits of a particular script (e.g. inputmode='thai digits')
symbols symbols, punctuation (suitable for a particular script)
predictOn text prediction switched on (e.g. for running text)
predictOff text prediction switched off (e.g. for passwords)
halfWidth half-width compatibility forms (e.g. Katakana; deprecated)

5.4 Relationship to XML Schema pattern facets

User agents may use information available in an XML Schema pattern facet to set the input mode. Note that a pattern facet is a hard restriction on the lexical value of an instance data node, and can specify different restrictions for different parts of the data item. Attribute inputmode is a soft hint about the kinds of characters that the user may most probably start to input into the form control. Attribute inputmode is provided in addition to pattern facets for the following reasons:

  1. The set of allowable characters specified in a pattern may be so wide that it is not possible to deduce a reasonable input mode setting. Nevertheless, there frequently is a kind of characters that will be input by the user with high probability. In such a case, inputmode allows to set the input mode for the user's convenience.

  2. In some cases, it would be possible to derive the input mode setting from the pattern because the set of characters allowed in the pattern closely corresponds to a set of characters covered by an inputmode attribute value. However, such a derivation would require a lot of data and calculations on the user agent.

  3. Small devices may leave the checking of patterns to the server, but will easily be able to switch to those input modes that they support. Being able to make data entry for the user easier is of particular importance on small devices.

5.5 Examples

This is an example of a form for Japanese address input. It is shown in table form; it will be replaced by actual syntax in a later version of this specification.

Caption: inputmode
Family name hiragana
(in kana) katakana
Given name hiragana
(in kana) katakana
Zip code latin digits
Address hiragana
(in kana) katakana
Email latin lowerCase
Telephone latin digits
Comments user predictOn

6. Acknowledgements

Version 1.0 of this specification was prepared by the W3C HTML Working Group. At the time of publication of the first edition, the members were:

Version 1.1 of this specification was produced by the W3C XHTML2 Working Group. At the time of publication, the members were:

Thanks to Gary Adams (Sun Microsystems), Jonny Axelsson (Metastasis design), Peter Chen (Philips), Dan Connolly (W3C), John Cowan (Reuters), Martin J. Dürst (W3C), Johan Hjelm (Ericsson), Ian Jacobs (W3C), Susan Lesch (W3C), Louis Theran (Nokia), Quinton Zondervan (Lotus), members of the W3C Mobile Access Interest Group, the W3C Synchronized Multimedia Working Group, the W3C WAI Protocols and Formats Working Group, and the Open Mobile Alliance, for contributing, reviewing and commenting on this document.

A. References

A.1. Normative References

[HTML4]
"HTML 4.01 Specification", W3C Recommendation, D. Raggett, A. Le Hors, I. Jacobs, eds., 24 December 1999. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-html401-19991224
The latest version is available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/html4
[RFC2854]
"The 'text/html' Media Type", D. Connely, L. Masinter, January 2000.
Available at: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2854.txt
[RFC3236]
"The 'application/xhtml+xml' Media Type", M. Baker, P. Stark, January 2002.
Available at: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3236.txt
[XHTML1]
"XHTML 1.0: The Extensible HyperText Markup Language (Second Edition) - A Reformulation of HTML 4 in XML 1.0", W3C Recommendation, Steven Pemberton et al., 26 January 2000, revised 1 August 2002. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/REC-xhtml1-20020801
The latest version is available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1
[XHTMLMOD]
"XHTML Modularization 1.0", W3C Recommendation, Shane McCarron, et. al. eds., 10 April 2001. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2001/REC-xhtml-modularization-20010410
The latest version is available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-modularization
[XML]
"Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (Fourth Edition)", W3C Recommendation, T. Bray, J. Paoli, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen, E. Maler, F. Yergeau, eds., 16 August 2006. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/REC-xml-20060816
The latest version is available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-xml

A.2. Informative References

[CHTML]
"Compact HTML for Small Information Appliances", W3C Note, T. Kamada, 9 February 1998. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/1998/NOTE-compactHTML-19980209
[GUIDELINES]
"HTML 4.0 Guidelines for Mobile Access, W3C Note, T. Kamada, T. Asada, M. Ishikawa, S. Matsui, eds., 15 March 1999. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/NOTE-html40-mobile-19990315
The latest version is available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-html40-mobile
Java Unicode Blocks
Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition, v 1.4.0 API Specification; Class Character.UnicodeBlock, Sun Microsystems, Inc, 2002. Available at http://java.sun.com/j2se/1.4/docs/api/java/lang/Character.UnicodeBlock.html.
Mobile Web Best Practices
Mobile Web Best Practices 1.0, W3C Recommendation, Jo Rabin, Charles McCathieNevile eds., 29 July 2009. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-mobile-bp-20080729
The latest version is available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/mobile-bp
UAAG 1.0
User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0, Ian Jacobs, Jon Gunderson, Eric Hansen, 2002. Working Draft available at http://www.w3.org/TR/UAAG10/.
Unicode Scripts
Script Names, Mark Davis, 2001. Unicode Technical Report #24 available at http://www.unicode.org/unicode/reports/tr24/.
[WCAG10]
"Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0", W3C Recommendation, W. Chisholm, G. Vanderheiden, I. Jacobs, eds., 5 May 1999. Available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/WAI-WEBCONTENT-19990505
The latest version is available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG10
[WML]
"Wireless Markup Language Specification", WAP Forum Ltd. The WAP Forum has consolidated into the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA). The specification work from WAP continues within OMA and can be found on the OMA Web site at: http://www.openmobilealliance.org/tech/affiliates/wap/wapindex.html
[XFORMS]
"XForms 1.0 (Third Edition)", John M Boyer, 29 October 2007.
Latest version available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xforms
[XHTMLMIME]
"XHTML Media Types", Masayasu Ishikawa, 1 August 2002.
Latest version available at: http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml-media-types

B. XHTML Basic Document Type Definition

This appendix is normative.

The DTD Implementation of XHTML Basic 1.1 is contained in this appendix. There are direct links to the various files, and the files are also contained in the "Gzip'd TAR" and "Zip" archives linked to at the top of this document. Please note that the files targeted by the "this version" links may change slowly over time if W3C publishes new Recommendations.

B.1. SGML Open Catalog Entry for XHTML Basic

This section contains the SGML Open Catalog-format definition of the public identifiers for XHTML Basic.

You can download this version of this file from http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xhtml-basic-20080729/xhtml-basic11.cat. The latest version is available at http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic11.cat.

-- .......................................................................... --
-- File catalog  ............................................................ --

--  XHTML Basic Catalog Data File

    Revision:  $Id: index.html,v 1.3 2018/10/09 13:20:25 denis Exp $ SMI

    See "Entity Management", SGML Open Technical Resolution 9401 for detailed
    information on supplying and using catalog data. This document is available
    from OASIS at URL:

        <http://www.oasis-open.org/html/tr9401.html>
--

-- .......................................................................... --
-- SGML declaration associated with XML  .................................... --

OVERRIDE YES

SGMLDECL "xml1.dcl"

-- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: --

-- XHTML Basic DTD modular driver file  ..................................... --

PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML Basic 1.1//EN"                       "xhtml-basic11.dtd"

-- XHTML Basic framework module ............................................. --

PUBLIC "-//W3C//ENTITIES XHTML Basic 1.1 Document Model 1.0//EN"  "xhtml-basic11-model-1.mod"

-- XHTML Inputmode module       ............................................. --

PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Inputmode 1.0//EN"  "xhtml-inputmode-1.mod"

-- End of catalog data  ..................................................... --
-- .......................................................................... --

B.2. XHTML Basic Driver

This section contains the driver for the XHTML Basic document type implementation as an XML DTD. It relies upon XHTML module implementations defined in [XHTMLMOD].

You can download this version of this file from http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xhtml-basic-20080729/xhtml-basic11.dtd. The latest version is available at http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic11.dtd.

<!-- XHTML Basic 1.1 DTD  ...................................................... -->
<!-- file: xhtml-basic11.dtd -->

<!-- XHTML Basic 1.1 DTD

     This is XHTML Basic, a proper subset of XHTML.

     The Extensible HyperText Markup Language (XHTML)
     Copyright 1998-2007 World Wide Web Consortium
        (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, European Research Consortium
         for Informatics and Mathematics, Keio University).
         All Rights Reserved.

     Permission to use, copy, modify and distribute the XHTML Basic DTD
     and its accompanying documentation for any purpose and without fee is
     hereby granted in perpetuity, provided that the above copyright notice
     and this paragraph appear in all copies.  The copyright holders make
     no representation about the suitability of the DTD for any purpose.

     It is provided "as is" without expressed or implied warranty.

        Editors:    Murray M. Altheim <mailto:[email protected]>
                    Peter Stark       <mailto:[email protected]>
                    Shane McCarron    <mailto:[email protected]>
        Revision:   $Id: index.html,v 1.3 2018/10/09 13:20:25 denis Exp $

-->
<!-- This is the driver file for version 1.1 of the XHTML Basic DTD.

     This DTD is identified by the PUBLIC and SYSTEM identifiers:

     PUBLIC: "-//W3C//DTD XHTML Basic 1.1//EN"
     SYSTEM: "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic11.dtd"
-->
<!ENTITY % XHTML.version  "-//W3C//DTD XHTML Basic 1.1//EN" >

<!-- Use this URI to identify the default namespace:

         "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"

     See the Qualified Names module for information
     on the use of namespace prefixes in the DTD.
-->
<!ENTITY % NS.prefixed "IGNORE" >
<!ENTITY % XHTML.prefix  "" >

<!-- Reserved for use with the XLink namespace:
-->
<!ENTITY % XLINK.xmlns "" >
<!ENTITY % XLINK.xmlns.attrib "" >

<!-- For example, if you are using XHTML Basic 1.1 directly, use
     the public identifier in the DOCTYPE declaration, with the namespace
     declaration on the document element to identify the default namespace:

         <?xml version="1.0"?>
         <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML Basic 1.1//EN"
             "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic11.dtd" >
         <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"
               xml:lang="en" >
         ...
         </html>
-->

<!-- reserved for future use with document profiles -->
<!ENTITY % XHTML.profile  "" >

<!-- Bidirectional Text features
     This feature-test entity is used to declare elements
     and attributes used for bidirectional text support.
-->
<!ENTITY % XHTML.bidi  "IGNORE" >

<?doc type="doctype" role="title" { XHTML Basic 1.1 } ?>

<!-- :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: -->

<!ENTITY % xhtml-events.module   "INCLUDE" >
<!ENTITY % xhtml-bdo.module      "%XHTML.bidi;" >

<!-- Inline Style Module  ........................................ -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-inlstyle.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-inlstyle.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-inlstyle.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Inline Style 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-inlstyle-1.mod" >
%xhtml-inlstyle.mod;]]>


<!ENTITY % xhtml-model.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ENTITIES XHTML Basic 1.1 Document Model 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic11-model-1.mod" >

<!ENTITY % xhtml-framework.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ENTITIES XHTML Modular Framework 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-framework-1.mod" >
%xhtml-framework.mod;

<!ENTITY % pre.content
     "( #PCDATA
      | %InlStruct.class;
      %InlPhras.class;
      %Anchor.class;
      %Inline.extra; )*"
>

<!ENTITY % xhtml-text.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Text 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-text-1.mod" >
%xhtml-text.mod;

<!ENTITY % xhtml-hypertext.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Hypertext 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-hypertext-1.mod" >
%xhtml-hypertext.mod;

<!ENTITY % xhtml-list.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Lists 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-list-1.mod" >
%xhtml-list.mod;

<!-- Add in the value attribute to the li element -->
<!ATTLIST %li.qname;
      value        %Number.datatype;         #IMPLIED
>

<!-- ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: -->

<!-- Scripting Module  ........................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-script.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-script.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-script.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Scripting 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-script-1.mod" >
%xhtml-script.mod;]]>

<!-- Style Sheets Module  ......................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-style.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-style.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-style.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Style Sheets 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-style-1.mod" >
%xhtml-style.mod;]]>

<!-- Image Module  ............................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-image.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-image.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-image.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Images 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-image-1.mod" >
%xhtml-image.mod;]]>

<!-- Tables Module ............................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-table.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-table.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-table.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Basic Tables 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic-table-1.mod" >
%xhtml-table.mod;]]>

<!-- Forms Module  ............................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-form.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-form.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-form.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Forms 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-form-1.mod" >
%xhtml-form.mod;]]>

<!-- Presentation Module  ........................................ -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-pres.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-pres.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-pres.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Presentation 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-pres-1.mod" >
%xhtml-pres.mod;]]>

<!-- Link Element Module  ........................................ -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-link.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-link.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-link.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Link Element 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-link-1.mod" >
%xhtml-link.mod;]]>

<!-- Document Metainformation Module  ............................ -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-meta.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-meta.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-meta.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Metainformation 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-meta-1.mod" >
%xhtml-meta.mod;]]>

<!-- Base Element Module  ........................................ -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-base.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-base.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-base.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Base Element 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-base-1.mod" >
%xhtml-base.mod;]]>

<!-- Param Element Module  ....................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-param.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-param.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-param.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Param Element 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-param-1.mod" >
%xhtml-param.mod;]]>

<!-- Embedded Object Module  ..................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-object.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-object.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-object.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Embedded Object 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-object-1.mod" >
%xhtml-object.mod;]]>

<!-- Inputmode Attribute Module  .................................. -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-inputmode.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-inputmode.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-inputmode.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Inputmode 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-inputmode-1.mod" >
%xhtml-inputmode.mod;]]>

<!-- Target Attribute Module  .................................... -->
<!ENTITY % xhtml-target.module "INCLUDE" >
<![%xhtml-target.module;[
<!ENTITY % xhtml-target.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Target 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-target-1.mod" >
%xhtml-target.mod;]]>


<!ENTITY % xhtml-struct.mod
     PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Document Structure 1.0//EN"
            "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-struct-1.mod" >
%xhtml-struct.mod;

<!-- end of XHTML Basic 1.1 DTD  ........................................... -->

B.3. XHTML Basic Customizations

An XHTML Family Document Type (such as XHTML Basic) must define the content model that it uses. This is done through a separate content model module that is instantiated by the XHTML Modular Framework. The content model module and the XHTML Basic Driver (above) work together to customize the module implementations to the document type's specific requirements. The content model module for XHTML Basic is defined below:

You can download this version of this file from http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xhtml-basic-20080729/xhtml-basic11-model-1.mod. The latest version is available at http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic11-model-1.mod.

<!-- ....................................................................... -->
<!-- XHTML Basic 1.1 Document Model Module  .................................... -->
<!-- file: xhtml-basic11-model-1.mod

     This is XHTML Basic, a proper subset of XHTML.
     Copyright 1998-2007 W3C (MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved.
     Revision: $Id: index.html,v 1.3 2018/10/09 13:20:25 denis Exp $ SMI

     This DTD module is identified by the PUBLIC and SYSTEM identifiers:

       PUBLIC "-//W3C//ENTITIES XHTML Basic 1.1 Document Model 1.0//EN"
       SYSTEM "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-basic11-model-1.mod"

     Revisions:
     (none)
     ....................................................................... -->

<!-- XHTML Basic Document Model

     This module describes the groupings of elements that make up
     common content models for XHTML elements.
-->

<!-- Optional Elements in head  .............. -->

<!ENTITY % HeadOpts.mix
     "( %script.qname; | %style.qname; | %meta.qname; 
      | %link.qname; | %object.qname; )*" >

<!-- script and noscript are used to contain scripts
     and alternative content
-->
<!ENTITY % Script.class "| %script.qname; | %noscript.qname;" >

<!-- Miscellaneous Elements  ................. -->

<!ENTITY % Misc.extra "" >

<!-- These elements are neither block nor inline, and can
     essentially be used anywhere in the document body.
-->
<!ENTITY % Misc.class
     "%Script.class;
      %Misc.extra;"
>

<!-- Inline Elements  ........................ -->

<!ENTITY % InlStruct.class "%br.qname; | %span.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % InlPhras.class
     "| %em.qname; | %strong.qname; | %dfn.qname; | %code.qname;
      | %samp.qname; | %kbd.qname; | %var.qname; | %cite.qname;
      | %abbr.qname; | %acronym.qname; | %q.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % InlPres.class
     "| %tt.qname; | %i.qname; | %b.qname; | %big.qname;
      | %small.qname; | %sub.qname; | %sup.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % I18n.class "" >

<!ENTITY % Anchor.class "| %a.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % InlSpecial.class "| %img.qname; | %object.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % InlForm.class
     "| %input.qname; | %select.qname; | %textarea.qname;
      | %label.qname; | %button.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % Inline.extra "" >

<!ENTITY % Inline.class
     "%InlStruct.class;
      %InlPhras.class;
      %InlPres.class;
      %Anchor.class;
      %InlSpecial.class;
      %InlForm.class;
      %Inline.extra;"
>

<!ENTITY % InlNoAnchor.class
     "%InlStruct.class;
      %InlPhras.class;
      %InlPres.class;
      %InlSpecial.class;
      %InlForm.class;
      %Inline.extra;"
>

<!ENTITY % InlNoAnchor.mix
     "%InlNoAnchor.class;
      %Misc.class;"
>

<!ENTITY % Inline.mix
     "%Inline.class;
      %Misc.class;"
>

<!-- Block Elements  ......................... -->

<!ENTITY % Heading.class
     "%h1.qname; | %h2.qname; | %h3.qname;
      | %h4.qname; | %h5.qname; | %h6.qname;"
>
<!ENTITY % List.class  "%ul.qname; | %ol.qname; | %dl.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % Table.class "| %table.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % Form.class  "| %form.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % Fieldset.class  "| %fieldset.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % BlkStruct.class "%p.qname; | %div.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % BlkPhras.class
     "| %pre.qname; | %blockquote.qname; | %address.qname;"
>

<!ENTITY % BlkPres.class "| %hr.qname;" >

<!ENTITY % BlkSpecial.class
     "%Table.class;
      %Form.class;
      %Fieldset.class;"
>

<!ENTITY % Block.extra "" >

<!ENTITY % Block.class
     "%BlkStruct.class;
      %BlkPhras.class;
      %BlkPres.class;
      %BlkSpecial.class;
      %Block.extra;"
>

<!ENTITY % Block.mix
     "%Heading.class;
      | %List.class;
      | %Block.class;
      %Misc.class;"
>

<!-- All Content Elements  ................... -->

<!-- declares all content except tables
-->
<!ENTITY % FlowNoTable.mix
     "%Heading.class;
      | %List.class;
      | %BlkStruct.class;
      %BlkPhras.class;
      %Form.class;
      %Block.extra;
      | %Inline.class;
      %Misc.class;"
>

<!ENTITY % Flow.mix
     "%Heading.class;
      | %List.class;
      | %Block.class;
      | %Inline.class;
      %Misc.class;"
>

<!-- end of xhtml-basic11-model-1.mod -->

Finally, we define the new inputmode attribute module.

You can download this version of this file from http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-xhtml-basic-20080729/xhtml-inputmode-1.mod. The latest version is available at http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-inputmode-1.mod.

<!-- ...................................................................... -->
<!-- XHTML Inputmode Module  .............................................. -->
<!-- file: xhtml-inputmode-1.mod

     This is XHTML, a reformulation of HTML as a modular XML application.
     Copyright 1998-2007 W3C (MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved.
     Revision: $Id: index.html,v 1.3 2018/10/09 13:20:25 denis Exp $

     This DTD module is identified by the PUBLIC and SYSTEM identifiers:

       PUBLIC "-//W3C//ELEMENTS XHTML Inputmode 1.0//EN"
       SYSTEM "http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/DTD/xhtml-inputmode-1.mod"

     Revisions:
     (none)
     ....................................................................... -->

<!-- Inputmode 

        inputmode

     This module declares the 'inputmode' attribute used for suggesting the
     input mode associated with an input or textarea element.
-->

<!-- render in this frame --> 
<!ENTITY % Inputmode.datatype "CDATA" >

<!-- add 'inputmode' attribute to 'input' element -->
<!ATTLIST %input.qname;
      inputmode       %Inputmode.datatype;   #IMPLIED
>

<!-- add 'inputmode' attribute to 'textarea' element -->
<!ATTLIST %textarea.qname;
      inputmode       %Inputmode.datatype;   #IMPLIED
>

<!-- end of xhtml-inputmode-1.mod -->