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<count> Count
Generic count element to count anything a NISO JATS user organization may wish to
count in a document. The @count-type attribute will name what is being counted (such as footnotes, tables, sections, contributors,
images, etc.) The @count attribute will state how many of the objects are in the document.
Usage/Remarks
Best Practice
Although a NISO JATS user organization could
choose to record all the counts of objects in a document using this element, the specific count elements
(<fig-count>, <equation-count>, <word-count>, etc.) should be used whenever
possible, using the <count> element only for counting objects that do not have a predefined count or for splitting
one of the defined counts into multiple types.
Models and Context
May be contained in
Description
This is an EMPTY element
Content Model
<!ELEMENT count EMPTY >
Tagged Sample
Number of contributors
...
<article-meta>
...
<abstract>...</abstract>
<conference>
<conf-date iso-8601-date="1999">1999</conf-date>
<conf-name>The 27th annual ACM SI/GUCCS conference</conf-name>
<conf-acronym>SIGUCCS</conf-acronym>
<conf-num>27</conf-num>
<conf-loc>Denver, Colorado, United States</conf-loc>
<conf-sponsor>ACM, Assoc. for Computing Machinery</conf-sponsor>
<conf-theme>User services conference for university and college
computing service organizations</conf-theme>
</conference>
<counts>
<count count-type="contributors" count="3"/>
<fig-count count="5"/>
<table-count count="3"/>
<equation-count count="10"/>
<ref-count count="26"/>
<page-count count="6"/>
<word-count count="2847"/>
</counts>
</article-meta>
...