3.1.3.2.3 index-see

An <index-see> element within an <indexterm> redirects the reader to another index entry that the reader should reference instead of the current one.

The <index-see> and <index-see-also> elements allow a form of redirection to another index entry within the generated index. The <index-see> element refers to an index entry that the reader should use instead of the current one, whereas the <index-see-also> element refers to an index entry that the reader should use in addition to the current one.

The <index-see> and <index-see-also> elements are ignored if their parent indexterm element contains any indexterm children.

Because an index-see indicates a redirection to use instead of the current entry, it is an error if, for any index-see, there is also an index-see-also or an indexterm for the same index entry (i.e., with an identical sort key). An implementation may (but need not) give an error message, and may (but need not) recover from this error condition by treating the index-see as an index-see-also.

It is not an error for there to be multiple index-see elements for a single index entry.

Contains

Doctype

Content model

topic (base), map (base), classifyMap, learningAssessment, learningBookmap, learningContent, learningMap, learningOverview, learningPlan, learningSummary

( text data or data or data-about or foreign or unknown or keyword or term or indexterm) (any number)

topic (technical content), map (technical content), concept, ditabase, glossary, glossentry, glossgroup, reference, task, bookmap

( text data or data or data-about or foreign or unknown or keyword or apiname or option or parmname or cmdname or msgnum or varname or wintitle or term or abbreviated-form or indexterm) (any number)

machineryTask

( text data or data or data-about or foreign or unknown or keyword or wintitle or term or indexterm) (any number)

Contained by

Doctype

Content model

topic (base), map (base), topic (technical content), map (technical content), concept, ditabase, glossary, glossentry, glossgroup, reference, task (strict), task (general), bookmap, classifyMap, machineryTask, learningAssessment, learningBookmap, learningContent, learningMap, learningOverview, learningPlan, learningSummary

indexterm

Inheritance

+ topic/index-base indexing-d/index-see

The following example illustrates the use of an <index-see> redirection element within an <indexterm>:

<indexterm>Carassius auratus
   <index-see>Goldfish</index-see>
</indexterm>

This will typically generate an index entry without a page reference:

The following example illustrates the use of an <index-see> redirection element to a more complex (multilevel) <indexterm>:

<indexterm>Feeding goldfish
   <index-see>Goldfish <indexterm>feeding</indexterm></index-see>
</indexterm>

This is part of the indexing markup that might generate index entries such as:

Attributes

Name

Description

Data Type

Default Value

Required?

keyref

Keyref provides a redirectable reference based on a key defined within a map. See 3.4.2.3 The keyref attribute for information on using this attribute.

CDATA

#IMPLIED

No

univ-atts attribute group (includes select-atts, id-atts, and localization-atts groups)

A set of related attributes, described in 3.4.1.3 univ-atts attribute group

     

global-atts attribute group (xtrf, xtrc)

A set of related attributes, described in 3.4.1.2 global-atts attribute group

     

class

A common attribute described in 3.4.1.9 Other common DITA attributes

     

Previous Topic:  3.1.3.2.2 indextermref

Next Topic:  3.1.3.2.4 index-see-also

Parent Topic:  3.1.3.2 Indexing group elements

Sibling Topics:

3.1.3.2.1 indexterm

3.1.3.2.2 indextermref

3.1.3.2.4 index-see-also

3.1.3.2.5 index-sort-as