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<access-date> Access Date for Cited Work (deprecated)
Date on which cited material was examined, particularly useful for citing resources
such as databases that may use a time signature to identify different versions. This
element is deprecated.
Usage/Remarks
The <access-date> element is deprecated and has been replaced by the <date-in-citation> element with a @content-type attribute
value “access-date” that
records the date on which the cited work was examined.
Some online resources are changing so quickly that a citation to the resource is not
complete without the date on which the cited resource was examined, since a day before
or a day later, the relevant material might be different. The <date-in-citation> element should be used to record such information inside <mixed-citation> and <element-citation> elements.
This element is an artifact, now used only within the <nlm-citation> element, which is deprecated. Use of this
element is therefore also deprecated. In all other cases, this element has been retained
only for backward compatibility.
Models and Context
May be contained in
Description
Content Model
<!ELEMENT access-date (#PCDATA %access-date-elements;)* >
Expanded Content Model
(#PCDATA | day | era | month | season | year | x)*
Tagged Sample
<date-in-citation> used instead of deprecated <access-date>
... <element-citation publication-type="commun"> <person-group person-group-type="author"> <string-name><surname>Harris</surname>, <given-names>Pat</given-names></string-name> </person-group> <article-title>New Z39.50 resource [Internet]</article-title> <source>Message to: Karen Patrias</source> <year iso-8601-date="1998-02-27T13:18">1998</year> <month>02</month> <day>27</day> <date-in-citation content-type="timestamp">1:18 pm</date-in-citation> <date-in-citation content-type="access-date">cited 1998 Feb 28</date-in-citation> <comment>[about 2 screens]</comment> </element-citation> </ref>...