style-type

Style Type

Description or explanation of the stylistic difference being recorded (for example, illuminated letters, drop cap).

Usage

Related Attribute: For some styling, three pieces of style information are most useful: the style name or style class, the style type (human readable), and further specifics concerning the style, which is recorded in the @style-detail attribute.
Being able to indicate three separate styling-related specifications is particularly useful in Japanese, where authors typically use emphasizing marks (dots or sesamis), called “Kenten”, which are associated with individual Japanese characters as dots above, dots beside, or similar typographic construction. Many languages (Japanese, Korean, Thai, Chinese, Arabic, Hungarian, and Armenian, to name but a few) use stress marks and similar typographic conventions (such as dots or sesamis) in the same way that English (as one example) uses <bold> or <italic> emphasis.
Here are some Japanese examples concerning how the @style-detail attribute might be used to modify the style (@style-type):
style-type
style-detail values
dot
  • open
  • closed (filled)
  • double (dot inside dot)
sesami (sesame)
  • open
  • closed (filled)
circle
  • open
  • closed (filled)
  • double (circle inside circle)
hatched
  • forward (slant left)
  • backward (slant right)
triangle
  • open
  • closed (filled)

Used on Elements: <styled-content>, <verse-group>, <verse-line>

ValueMeaning
Text, numbers, or special charactersName or description for the stylistic type, for example, “green background”.
Restriction@style-type is an optional attribute; there is no default.

Example 1

...
<p><styled-content 
  specific-use="print" 
  style-type="drop cap" 
  style="para-d2">D</styled-content>etecting pancreatic cancer 
in its early stages is complicated ...</p>
...

Example 2

...
<p><styled-content 
  specific-use="emphasis" 
  style-type="dot" 
  style-detail="open"  
  toggle="no">あいうえお</styled-content> ....</p>
...