built-in entity
external-text-entity #dtdor
entity is #dtd
The name of the external entity that contains the declarations that follow the declarations in an SGML doctype
declaration.
If the %q
format item is used for the #dtd
entity, it will produce the string #dtd
. Note, however, that this entity really doesn't have a name, and that by using a variant SGML syntax, an SGML document can define an entity with the name #dtd
that produces the results with the %q
format item. To distinguish the real #dtd
entity from the user's entity with the same name, use the entity is #dtd
test.
The entity is #dtd
test is used to determine whether the real entity is the #dtd
entity. #dtd
is used the way external
, public
, or parameter
are used in an entity
test, and can be combined with these other keywords. This is useful when an external-text-entity
rule can process either the #dtd
entity or another entity, and needs to determine which one it has processed.
If there are any external-text-entity
rules in an OmniMark program that use the keyword #dtd
in their headings, all #dtd
entities must be handled by the OmniMark program. If no #dtd
entity is handled by an OmniMark program then all such entities are subject to OmniMark's default processing.
In the head of the external-text-entity
rule, #dtd
can be combined with either #implied
or the names of named entities, but not with both, because #implied
cannot be combined with the names of entities.
The #dtd
entity is considered a parameter entity (not a general entity) for the purposes of the entity is general
and entity is parameter
tests.
The following sample external text entity rule uses a file called default.dtd
when there is an
external identifier at the start of the DTD that has no public or system identifier (e.g., !DOCTYPE doc SYSTEM
).
external-text-entity #dtd when entity isnt (system | public) output file "default.dtd"