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<version> Version Statement
A full version statement, which may be only a number, for data or software that is
cited or described.
Usage/Remarks
The <version> element is not a generic, all purpose version number; its use is limited to inside
the citing elements: <mixed-citation>, <element-citation>, <product>, <related-article>, and <related-object>. See Related Elements below for other version elements and attributes.
The content of <version> may be a simple version number (such as “<version>16</version>” or
“<version>XII</version>”). More complex version statements may
contain a textual statement (“Fifth PC version, patches 2-3”), dates
that the dataset covers, the version number as an ordinal (“3rd” or
“3rd version”), or superscripted ordinals
(“4<sup>th</sup>” or
“10<sup>th</sup> version”).
Best Practice for @designator
Whether the content of <version> is a simple number or a complex phrase, the @designator attribute can be used to hold the simple numerical or alphabetic
version number, if there is such a number (<version designator="16.2">16th version, second release</version>).
Models and Context
May be contained in
Description
Any combination of:
- Text, numbers, or special characters
- Baseline Change Elements
Content Model
<!ELEMENT version (#PCDATA %version-elements;)* >
Expanded Content Model
(#PCDATA | sub | sup)*