Tagging Ordinal Numbers
Cited Edition Statements: Edition statements
(<edition>) in JATS journal articles are allowed only
within citations (<mixed-citation> or <element-citation>), not in the metadata for the article (<article-meta>). Edition statements
inside citations are frequently given as ordinal numbers (first, second,
third) and abbreviated with an “st”, “th”, or “rd” suffix. These
ordinals may either directly follow the number (4th) or be placed in a
superscript following the number (4<sup>th</sup>). JATS allows
some flexibility in placing these ordinals, and each publisher or archive will
need to decide whether or not these ordinal suffixes are part of the
element’s content.
For example, consider the citation that names the edition as
“3rd”:
- Archives and publishers who wish to regularize content for searching can eliminate these extra characters and tag the edition as <edition>3<edition>.
- Archives who wish to record exactly each detail of the printed volume can retain
these extra characters:
- inside the edition statement: <edition>3<sup>rd</sup><edition>
- outside the edition statement inside the text of a mixed citation: <edition>3<edition><sup>rd</sup>
- inside the edition statement, using the @designator
attribute to preserve just the number:
... <edition designator="3">3<sup>rd</sup></edition> ...
Volume Numbers: In JATS journal articles, the volume number
element (<volume>) is used both inside the article metadata and inside
citations:
- Inside the article metadata (<article-meta>), the ordinals for a volume number must be placed inside the <volume> element.
- Inside citations (<mixed-citation> or <element-citation>), the ordinals used with a volume
number can be:
- inside the volume number: <volume>1<sup>st</sup><volume>
- outside the volume number inside the text of a mixed citation: <volume>1<volume><sup>st</sup>
The related <volume-id> element is used to record an identifier, such as a DOI, that describes an
entire volume of a journal or series.