CVS WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/TR-version

Update of /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/TR-version
In directory gil:/tmp/cvs-serv16081/TR-version

Modified Files:
	Overview.html 
Log Message:
changes related to NIF announced at  http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-multilingualweb-lt/2013Aug/0038.html 

--- /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/TR-version/Overview.html	2013/07/30 02:42:24	1.113
+++ /w3ccvs/WWW/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/TR-version/Overview.html	2013/08/16 15:57:46	1.114
@@ -5,13 +5,13 @@
 
 </style><link rel="stylesheet" href="local.css" type="text/css"/><link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="http://www.w3.org/StyleSheets/TR/W3C-WD.css"/></head><body><div class="head"><p><a href="http://www.w3.org/"><img src="http://www.w3.org/Icons/w3c_home" alt="W3C" height="48" width="72"/></a></p>
 <h1><a name="title" id="title"></a>Internationalization Tag Set (ITS) Version 2.0</h1>
-<h2><a name="w3c-doctype" id="w3c-doctype"></a>W3C Working Draft @@ @@ 2013</h2><dl><dt>This version:</dt><dd>
-         <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-2013@@@@/">
-        http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-2013@@@@/</a>
+<h2><a name="w3c-doctype" id="w3c-doctype"></a>W3C Last Call Working Draft 20 August 2013</h2><dl><dt>This version:</dt><dd>
+         <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-20130820/">
+        http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-20130820/</a>
       </dd><dt>Latest version:</dt><dd>
          <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/its20/">http://www.w3.org/TR/its20/</a>
       </dd><dt>Previous version:</dt><dd><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-20130521/">
-        http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-20130521/</a></dd><dt>Editors:</dt><dd>David Filip, University of Limerick</dd><dd>Shaun McCance, Invited Expert</dd><dd>Dave Lewis, TCD</dd><dd>Christian Lieske, SAP AG</dd><dd>Arle Lommel, DFKI</dd><dd>Jirka Kosek, UEP</dd><dd>Felix Sasaki, DFKI / W3C Fellow</dd><dd>Yves Savourel, ENLASO</dd></dl><p>This document is also available in these non-normative formats: <a href="its20.odd">ODD/XML document</a>, <a href="itstagset20.zip">self-contained zipped archive</a>, and <a href="diffs/diff-wd20130730-wd20130521.html">XHTML Diff markup to previous publication
+        http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-20130521/</a></dd><dt>Editors:</dt><dd>David Filip, University of Limerick</dd><dd>Shaun McCance, Invited Expert</dd><dd>Dave Lewis, TCD</dd><dd>Christian Lieske, SAP AG</dd><dd>Arle Lommel, DFKI</dd><dd>Jirka Kosek, UEP</dd><dd>Felix Sasaki, DFKI / W3C Fellow</dd><dd>Yves Savourel, ENLASO</dd></dl><p>This document is also available in these non-normative formats: <a href="its20.odd">ODD/XML document</a>, <a href="itstagset20.zip">self-contained zipped archive</a>, and <a href="diffs/diff-wd20130820-wd20130521.html">XHTML Diff markup to previous publication
         2013-05-21</a>.</p><p class="copyright"><a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/ipr-notice#Copyright">Copyright</a> © 2013 <a href="http://www.w3.org/"><acronym title="World Wide Web Consortium">W3C</acronym></a><sup>®</sup> (<a href="http://www.csail.mit.edu/"><acronym title="Massachusetts Institute of Technology">MIT</acronym></a>, <a href="http://www.ercim.eu/"><acronym title="European Research Consortium for Informatics and Mathematics">ERCIM</acronym></a>, <a href="http://www.keio.ac.jp/">Keio</a>, <a href="http://ev.buaa.edu.cn/">Beihang</a>), All Rights Reserved. W3C <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/ipr-notice#Legal_Disclaimer">liability</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/ipr-notice#W3C_Trademarks">trademark</a> and <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/copyright-documents">document use</a> rules apply.</p></div><hr/><div>
 <h2><a name="abstract" id="abstract"></a>Abstract</h2><p>The technology described in this document – the <em>Internationalization Tag Set (ITS)
         2.0</em> – enhances the foundation to integrate automated processing of human language
@@ -31,7 +31,7 @@
         concepts that are designed to foster the automated creation and processing of multilingual
         Web content. ITS 2.0 focuses on HTML, XML-based formats in general, and can leverage
         processing based on the XML Localization Interchange File Format (XLIFF), as well as the
-        Natural Language Processing Interchange Format (NIF).</p><p>This document was produced by a group operating under the <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Patent-Policy-20040205/">5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy</a>. W3C maintains a <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/01/pp-impl/53116/status">public list of any patent disclosures</a> made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Patent-Policy-20040205/#def-essential">Essential Claim(s)</a> must disclose the information in accordance with <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Patent-Policy-20040205/#sec-Disclosure">section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy</a>. </p></div><div class="toc">
+        Natural Language Processing Interchange Format (NIF).</p><p>This document was published by the <a href="http://www.w3.org/International/multilingualweb/lt/">MultilingualWeb-LT Working Group</a> as a Last Call Working Draft. The Last Call period ends 10 September 2013. The publication reflects changes made since the previous Last Call publication 21 May 2013. The Working Group expects to advance this document to Recommendation status (see <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/02/Process-20040205/tr.html#maturity-levels">W3C document maturity levels</a>).</p><p>All <a href="http://www.w3.org/International/multilingualweb/lt/drafts/its20/disposition-of-comments-2nd-last-call.html">last call issues</a> in the normative sections (from <a href="#notation-terminology">Section 3: Notation and Terminology</a> to <a href="#datacategory-description">Section 8: Description of Data Categories</a> and <a href="#normative-references">Appendix A: References</a> to <a href="#its-schemas">Appendix D: Schemas for ITS</a>) ave been resolved. As announced in the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-20130521/#status">previous draft</a>, the other, non-normative sections have been updated with explanatory material. The Working Group encourages feedback until 10 September 2013.</p><p>One substantive change was made that requires a third last call draft: the <a href="#conversion-to-nif">conversion to NIF</a> was categorized as a non-normative feature (this was a <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-its20-20130521/#conversion-to-nif">normative feature in the previous draft</a>). The working group encourages especially feedback on this change from the RDF community.</p><p>Since the ITS 2.0 test suite already has a high coverage for normative features of this specification, the Working Group expects to advance the specification directly to Proposed Recommendation status.</p><p>To give feedback send your comments to <a href="mailto:public-multilingualweb-lt-comments@w3.org">public-multilingualweb-lt-comments@w3.org</a>. Use "Cmment on ITS 2.0 specification WD" in the subject line of your email. The <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-multilingualweb-lt-comments/">archives for this list</a> are publicly available. See also <a href="https://www.w3.org/International/multilingualweb/lt/track/issues/">issues discussed within the Working Group</a> and the <a href="#changelog-since-20130521">list of changes</a> since the previous publication.</p><p>Publication as a Last Call Working Draft does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership. This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.</p><p>This document was produced by a group operating under the <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Patent-Policy-20040205/">5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy</a>. W3C maintains a <a href="http://www.w3.org/2004/01/pp-impl/53116/status">public list of any patent disclosures</a> made in connection with the deliverabes of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Patent-Policy-20040205/#def-essential">Essential Claim(s)</a> must disclose the information in accordance with <a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Patent-Policy-20040205/#sec-Disclosure">section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy</a>. </p></div><div class="toc">
 <h2><a name="contents" id="contents"></a>Table of Contents</h2><div class="toc"><div class="toc1">1 <a href="#introduction">Introduction</a><div class="toc2">1.1 <a href="#overview">Overview</a></div>
 <div class="toc2">1.2 <a href="#general-motiviation-for-ITS2.0">General motivation for going beyond ITS 1.0</a></div>
 <div class="toc2">1.3 <a href="#usage-scenarios">Usage Scenarios</a></div>
@@ -75,16 +75,15 @@
 <div class="toc3">5.2.2 <a href="#selection-local">Local Selection in an XML Document</a></div>
 </div>
 <div class="toc2">5.3 <a href="#selectors">Query Language of Selectors</a><div class="toc3">5.3.1 <a href="#queryLanguage">Choosing Query Language</a></div>
-<div class="toc3">5.3.2 <a href="#d0e2542">XPath 1.0</a></div>
+<div class="toc3">5.3.2 <a href="#d0e2530">XPath 1.0</a></div>
 <div class="toc3">5.3.3 <a href="#css-selectors">CSS Selectors</a></div>
-<div class="toc3">5.3.4 <a href="#d0e2790">Additional query languages</a></div>
+<div class="toc3">5.3.4 <a href="#d0e2778">Additional query languages</a></div>
 <div class="toc3">5.3.5 <a href="#its-param">Variables in selectors</a></div>
 </div>
 <div class="toc2">5.4 <a href="#link-external-rules">Link to External Rules</a></div>
 <div class="toc2">5.5 <a href="#selection-precedence">Precedence between Selections</a></div>
 <div class="toc2">5.6 <a href="#associating-its-with-existing-markup">Associating ITS Data Categories with Existing Markup</a></div>
-<div class="toc2">5.7 <a href="#conversion-to-nif">Conversion to NIF</a></div>
-<div class="toc2">5.8 <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tools Annotation</a></div>
+<div class="toc2">5.7 <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tools Annotation</a></div>
 </div>
 <div class="toc1">6 <a href="#html5-markup">Using ITS Markup in HTML</a><div class="toc2">6.1 <a href="#html5-local-attributes">Mapping of Local Data Categories to HTML</a></div>
 <div class="toc2">6.2 <a href="#html5-global-rules">Global rules</a></div>
@@ -157,10 +156,11 @@
 <div class="toc1">C <a href="#lqissue-typevalues">Values for the Localization Quality Issue Type</a></div>
 <div class="toc1">D <a href="#its-schemas">Schemas for ITS</a></div>
 <div class="toc1">E <a href="#informative-references">References</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
-<div class="toc1">F <a href="#nif-backconversion">Conversion NIF2ITS</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
-<div class="toc1">G <a href="#list-of-elements-and-attributes">List of ITS 2.0 Global Elements and Local Attributes</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
-<div class="toc1">H <a href="#revisionlog">Revision Log</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
-<div class="toc1">I <a href="#acknowledgements">Acknowledgements</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
+<div class="toc1">F <a href="#conversion-to-nif">Conversion to NIF</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
+<div class="toc1">G <a href="#nif-backconversion">Conversion NIF2ITS</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
+<div class="toc1">H <a href="#list-of-elements-and-attributes">List of ITS 2.0 Global Elements and Local Attributes</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
+<div class="toc1">I <a href="#revisionlog">Revision Log</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
+<div class="toc1">J <a href="#acknowledgements">Acknowledgements</a> (Non-Normative)</div>
 </div><hr/><div class="body"><div class="div1">
 <h2><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="introduction" id="introduction"></a>1 Introduction</h2><p>
             <em>This section is informative.</em>
@@ -307,7 +307,7 @@
               metadata in localization workflows</p></li></ul><p>One example outcome of the resulting synergies is the <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tool Annotation</a> mechanism. It addresses the
             provenance-related requirement by allowing ITS processors to leave a trace: ITS
             processors can basically say “It is me that generated this bit of
-              information”. Another example are the <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a> related details of ITS 2.0, which help to couple Natural Language
+              information”. Another example are the <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a> related details of ITS 2.0, which provide a non-normative approach to couple Natural Language
             Processing with concepts of the Semantic Web.</p></div><div class="div2">
 <h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="usage-scenarios" id="usage-scenarios"></a>1.3 Usage Scenarios</h3><p>The <a title="
Internationalization Tag Set (ITS) Version 1.0
" href="#its10">[ITS 1.0]</a>
                <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/REC-its-20070403/#introduction">introduction</a> states: “ITS is a technology to easily create XML, which is internationalized and can be localized effectively”.  In order to make this tangible, ITS 1.0 provided examples for <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/REC-its-20070403/#users-usage">users and usages</a>. Implicitly, these examples carried the information that ITS covers two areas: one that is related to the static dimension of mono-lingual content, and one that is related to the dynamic dimension of multilingual production.</p><ul><li><p>Static mono-lingual (for example, the area of content authors): This part of the
@@ -338,8 +338,8 @@
                 settled, the Ruby data category possibly will be reintroduced, in a subsequent
                 version of ITS.</p></li><li><p>The <a href="#directionality">Directionality</a> data category reflects directionality markup in <a title="HTML 4.01" href="#html4">[HTML 4.01]</a>. The reason is that enhancements are being discussed in the context of HTML5 that are expected to change the approach to marking up directionality, in particular to support content whose directionality needs to be isolated from that of surrounding content. However, these enhancements are not finalized yet. They will be reflected in a future revision of ITS.</p></li></ul><p>
                <em>Additional or modified mechanisms:</em> The following mechanisms from ITS 1.0 have been modified  or added to ITS 2.0:</p><ul><li><p id="query-language-on-rules-element">ITS 1.0 used only XPath as the mechanism for selecting nodes in <a href="#basic-concepts-selection-global">global rules</a>. ITS 2.0 allows for choosing the <a href="#selectors">query language of selectors</a>. The default is XPath 1.0. An ITS 2.0 processor is free to support other selection mechanisms, like CSS selectors or other versions of XPath.</p></li><li><p id="parameters-in-selector">In global rules it is now possible to set <a href="#its-param">variables for the selectors</a> (XPath expression). The <code class="its-elem-markup">param</code> element serves this purpose.</p></li><li><p>ITS 2.0 has an <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tools Annotation</a> mechanism to associate processor information with the use of individual data categories. See <a class="section-ref" href="#traceability">Section 2.6: Traceabilty</a> for details.</p></li></ul><p>
-               <em>Mappings:</em> ITS 2.0 provides a normative algorithm to convert ITS 2.0 information into <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a> and links to guidance about how to relate ITS 2.0 to XLIFF. See <a class="section-ref" href="#mapping-conversion">Section 2.7: Mapping and conversion</a> for details.</p><p>
-               <em>Changes to the conformance section</em>: The <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance">Section 4: Conformance</a> tells implementers how to implement ITS. For ITS 2.0, the conformance statements related to Ruby have been removed, and a conformance clause related to processing <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a> has been added. For <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a>, a dedicated conformance section has been created. Finally, a conformance clause related to Non-ITS elements and attributes has been added.</p></div><div class="div2">
+               <em>Mappings:</em> ITS 2.0 provides a non-normative algorithm to convert ITS 2.0 information into <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a> and links to guidance about how to relate ITS 2.0 to XLIFF. See <a class="section-ref" href="#mapping-conversion">Section 2.7: Mapping and conversion</a> for details.</p><p>
+               <em>Changes to the conformance section</em>: The <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance">Section 4: Conformance</a> tells implementers how to implement ITS. For ITS 2.0, the conformance statements related to Ruby have been removed. For <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a>, a dedicated conformance section has been created. Finally, a conformance clause related to Non-ITS elements and attributes has been added.</p></div><div class="div2">
 <h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="extended-implementation-hints" id="extended-implementation-hints"></a>1.5 Extended implementation hints</h3><p id="unicode-normalization">As a general guidance, implementations of ITS 2.0 are encouraged to use a <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2012/WD-charmod-norm-20120501/#sec-NormalizingTranscoder">normalizing transcoder</a>. It converts from a legacy encoding to a Unicode encoding form and ensures that the result is in Unicode Normalization Form C. Further information on the topic of Unicode normalization is provided in <a title="Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0: Normalization" href="#charmod-norm">[Charmod Norm]</a>.</p></div></div><div class="div1">
 <h2><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="basic-concepts" id="basic-concepts"></a>2 Basic Concepts</h2><p>
             <em>This section is informative.</em>
@@ -511,7 +511,7 @@
 <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/html&gt;</strong></pre></div><p>[Source file: <a href="examples/html5/EX-translate-html5-inline-global-1.html">examples/html5/EX-translate-html5-inline-global-1.html</a>]</p></div></div><div class="div3">
 <h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="html5-its-local-markup" id="html5-its-local-markup"></a>2.5.2 Local approach</h4><p>In HTML, an ITS 2.0 local data category is realized with the prefix <code>its-</code>. 
               The general mapping of the XML based ITS 2.0 attributes to their HTML counterparts is defined in 
-              <a class="section-ref" href="#html5-local-attributes">Section 6.1: Mapping of Local Data Categories to HTML</a>. An informative table in <a class="section-ref" href="#list-of-elements-and-attributes">Appendix G: List of ITS 2.0 Global Elements and Local Attributes</a>
+              <a class="section-ref" href="#html5-local-attributes">Section 6.1: Mapping of Local Data Categories to HTML</a>. An informative table in <a class="section-ref" href="#list-of-elements-and-attributes">Appendix H: List of ITS 2.0 Global Elements and Local Attributes</a>
               provides an overview of the mapping for all data categories.</p></div><div class="div3">
 <h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="html5-existing-markup-versus-its" id="html5-existing-markup-versus-its"></a>2.5.3 HTML markup with ITS 2.0 counterparts</h4><p>There are four ITS 2.0 data categories, which have counterparts in HTML markup. In these cases, native HTML markup provides some information
               in terms of ITS 2.0 data categories. For these data categories, ITS 2.0 defines the following:</p><ul><li><p>The <a href="#language-information">Language Information</a> data category has the HTML <code>lang</code> 
@@ -545,18 +545,18 @@
       <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;img</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">src</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"http://example.com/myimg.png"</span> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">alt</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"My image"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">/&gt;</strong>.<strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/p&gt;</strong>
   <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/body&gt;</strong>
 <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/html&gt;</strong></pre></div><p>[Source file: <a href="examples/html5/EX-its-and-existing-HTML5-markup.html">examples/html5/EX-its-and-existing-HTML5-markup.html</a>]</p></div><p>There are also some HTML markup elements that have or can have similar, but not necessarily identical, roles and behaviors as certain ITS 2.0 data categories. For example, the HTML <code>dfn</code> element could be used to identify a term in the sense of the <a href="#terminology">Terminology</a> data category. However, this is not always the case and it depends on the intentions of the HTML content author. To accommodate this situation, users of ITS 2.0 are encouraged to specify the semantics of existing HTML markup in an ITS 2.0 context with a dedicated global rules file. For example, a rule can be used to define that the HTML <code>dfn</code> has the semantics of ITS <code>term="yes"</code>. For additional examples, see the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/NOTE-xml-i18n-bp-2080213/#relating-its-plus-xhtml">XML I18N Best Practices</a> document.</p></div><div class="div3">
-<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="html5-standoff-markup-explanation" id="html5-standoff-markup-explanation"></a>2.5.4 Standoff markup in HTML5</h4><p>The <a href="#provenance">Provenance</a> and the <a href="#lqissue">Localization Quality Issue</a> data categories allow for using so-called standoff markup, see the XML <a href="#EX-provenance-global-1">Example 59</a>. In HTML such standoff markup is placed into a <code>script</code> element. If this is done, the constraints for <a href="#provenance-records-in-html5-constraint">Provenance standoff</a> markup in HTML and <a href="#loc-quality-issues-in-html5-constraint">Localization quality issue</a> markup in HTML need to be taken into account. Examples of standoff markup in HTML for the two data categories are <a href="#EX-provenance-html5-local-2">Example 62</a> and <a href="#EX-locQualityIssue-html5-local-2">Examle 77</a>.</p></div><div class="div3">
+<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="html5-standoff-markup-explanation" id="html5-standoff-markup-explanation"></a>2.5.4 Standoff markup in HTML5</h4><p>The <a href="#provenance">Provenance</a> and the <a href="#lqissue">Localization Quality Issue</a> data categories allow for using so-called standoff markup, see the XML <a href="#EX-provenance-global-1">Example 58</a>. In HTML such standoff markup is placed into a <code>script</code> element. If this is done, the constraints for <a href="#provenance-records-in-html5-constraint">Provenance standoff</a> markup in HTML and <a href="#loc-quality-issues-in-html5-constraint">Localization quality issue</a> markup in HTML need to be taken into account. Examples of standoff markup in HTML for the two data categories are <a href="#EX-provenance-html5-local-2">Example 61</a> and <a href="#EX-locQualityIssue-html5-local-2">Examle 76</a>.</p></div><div class="div3">
 <h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="usage-in-legacy-html" id="usage-in-legacy-html"></a>2.5.5 Version of HTML</h4><p>ITS 2.0 does not define how to use ITS in HTML versions prior to version 5. Users are
               thus encouraged to migrate their content to <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a> or XHTML. While it is possible to use
               <code>its-*</code> attributes introduced for <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a> in older versions of HTML (such
               as 3.2 or 4.01) and pages using these attributes will work without any problems,
               <code>its-*</code> attributes will be marked as invalid by validators.</p></div></div><div class="div2">
-<h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="traceability" id="traceability"></a>2.6 Traceability</h3><p>The <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tools Annotation</a> mechanism allows processor information to be associated with individual data categories in a document, independently from data category annotations themselves (e.g. the Entity Type related to Text Analysis). The mechanism associates identifiers for tools with data categories via the <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> attribute (or <a href="">annotators-ref</a> in <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a>) and is mandatory for the <a href="#mtconfidence">MT Confidence</a> data category. For the <a href="#terminology">Terminology</a> and <a href="#textanalysis">Text Analysis</a> data categories the ITS Tools Annotation is mandatory if the data categories provide confidence information. Nevertheless <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tools Annotation</a> can be used for all data categories. <a href="#EX-its-tool-annotation-2">Example 24</a> demonstrates the usage in the context of several data categories.
+<h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="traceability" id="traceability"></a>2.6 Traceability</h3><p>The <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tools Annotation</a> mechanism allows processor information to be associated with individual data categories in a document, independently from data category annotations themselves (e.g. the Entity Type related to Text Analysis). The mechanism associates identifiers for tools with data categories via the <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> attribute (or <a href="">annotators-ref</a> in <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a>) and is mandatory for the <a href="#mtconfidence">MT Confidence</a> data category. For the <a href="#terminology">Terminology</a> and <a href="#textanalysis">Text Analysis</a> data categories the ITS Tools Annotation is mandatory if the data categories provide confidence information. Nevertheless <a href="#its-tool-annotation">ITS Tools Annotation</a> can be used for all data categories. <a href="#EX-its-tool-annotation-2">Example 23</a> demonstrates the usage in the context of several data categories.
           </p></div><div class="div2">
 <h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="mapping-conversion" id="mapping-conversion"></a>2.7 Mapping and conversion</h3><div class="div3">
-<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="mapping-NIF" id="mapping-NIF"></a>2.7.1 ITS and RDF/NIF</h4><p>ITS 2.0 defines an algorithm to convert XML or HTML documents (or their DOM
-        representations) that contain ITS metadata to the RDF format based on <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a>. NIF is an RDF/OWL-based format that aims at interoperability between Natural Language Processing (NLP) tools, language resources and annotations.</p><p>The conversion from <a href="#conversion-to-nif">ITS 2.0 to NIF</a> results in RDF triples. These triples represent the textual content of the original document as RDF typed information. The ITS annotation is represented as properties of content-related triples and relies on an <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its/rdf#">ITS RDF vocabulary</a>.</p><p>The back conversion from <a href="#nif-backconversion">NIF to ITS 2.0</a> is defined informatively. One motivation for the back conversion is a roundtrip workflow like: 1) conversion to NIF 2) in NIF representation detection of named entities using NLP tools 3) back conversion to HTML and generation of <a href="#textanalysis">Text Analysis</a> markup. The outcome are HTML documents with liked information, see <a href="#EX-text-analysis-html5-local-1">Example 53</a>.</p></div><div class="div3">
-<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="mapping-XLIFF" id="mapping-XLIFF"></a>2.7.2 ITS and XLIFF</h4><p>The XML Localization Interchange File Format <a title="XLIFF Version 1.2" href="#xliff1.2">[XLIFF 1.2]</a> is an OASIS standard that enables translatable source text and its translation to be passed between different tools within localization and translation workflows. <a title="XLIFF Version 2.0" href="#xliff2.0">[XLIFF 2.0]</a> is the successor of <a title="XLIFF Version 1.2" href="#xliff1.2">[XLIFF 1.2]</a> and under development. XLIFF has been widely implemented in various translation management systems, computer aided translation tools and in utilities for extracting translatable content from source documents and merging back the content in the target language..</p><p>The mapping between ITS and XLIFF therefore unpins several important ITS 2.0 usage scenarios <atitle="Metadata for the Multilingual Web - Usage Scenarios and Implementations " href="#mlw-metadata-us-impl">[MLW US IMPL]</a>. These usage scenarios involve:</p><ul><li><p>the extraction of ITS metadata from a source language file into XLIFF</p></li><li><p>the addition of ITS metadata into an XLIFF file by translation tools</p></li><li><p>the mapping of ITS metadata in an XLIFF file into ITS metadata in the resulting target language files.</p></li></ul><p>ITS 2.0 has no normative dependency on XLIFF, however a  <a href="http://www.w3.org/International/its/wiki/XLIFF_Mapping">non-normative definition of how to represent ITS 2.0 data categories in XLIFF 1.2 or XLIFF 2.0</a> is being defined within the <a href="http://www.w3.org/International/its/ig/">Internationalization Tag Set Interest Group</a>.</p></div></div><div class="div2">
+<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="mapping-NIF" id="mapping-NIF"></a>2.7.1 ITS and RDF/NIF</h4><p>ITS 2.0 provides a non-normative algorithm to convert XML or HTML documents (or their DOM
+        representations) that contain ITS metadata to the RDF format based on <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a>. NIF is an RDF/OWL-based format that aims at interoperability between Natural Language Processing (NLP) tools, language resources and annotations.</p><p>The conversion from <a href="#conversion-to-nif">ITS 2.0 to NIF</a> results in RDF triples. These triples represent the textual content of the original document as RDF typed information. The ITS annotation is represented as properties of content-related triples and relies on an <a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its/rdf#">ITS RDF vocabulary</a>.</p><p>The back conversion from <a href="#nif-backconversion">NIF to ITS 2.0</a> is defined informatively as well. One motivation for the back conversion is a roundtrip workflow like: 1) conversion to NIF 2) in NIF representation detection of named entities using NLP tools 3) back conversion to HTML and generation of <a href="#textanalysis">Text Analysis</a> markup. The outcome are HTML documentswith linked information, see <a href="#EX-text-analysis-html5-local-1">Example 52</a>.</p></div><div class="div3">
+<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="mapping-XLIFF" id="mapping-XLIFF"></a>2.7.2 ITS and XLIFF</h4><p>The XML Localization Interchange File Format <a title="XLIFF Version 1.2" href="#xliff1.2">[XLIFF 1.2]</a> is an OASIS standard that enables translatable source text and its translation to be passed between different tools within localization and translation workflows. <a title="XLIFF Version 2.0" href="#xliff2.0">[XLIFF 2.0]</a> is the successor of <a title="XLIFF Version 1.2" href="#xliff1.2">[XLIFF 1.2]</a> and under development. XLIFF has been widely implemented in various translation management systems, computer aided translation tools and in utilities for extracting translatable content from source documents and merging back the content in the target language.</p><p>The mapping between ITS and XLIFF therefore unpins several important ITS 2.0 usage scenarios <a itle="Metadata for the Multilingual Web - Usage Scenarios and Implementations " href="#mlw-metadata-us-impl">[MLW US IMPL]</a>. These usage scenarios involve:</p><ul><li><p>the extraction of ITS metadata from a source language file into XLIFF</p></li><li><p>the addition of ITS metadata into an XLIFF file by translation tools</p></li><li><p>the mapping of ITS metadata in an XLIFF file into ITS metadata in the resulting target language files.</p></li></ul><p>ITS 2.0 has no normative dependency on XLIFF, however a  <a href="http://www.w3.org/International/its/wiki/XLIFF_Mapping">non-normative definition of how to represent ITS 2.0 data categories in XLIFF 1.2 or XLIFF 2.0</a> is being defined within the <a href="http://www.w3.org/International/its/ig/">Internationalization Tag Set Interest Group</a>.</p></div></div><div class="div2">
 <h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="implementing-its20" id="implementing-its20"></a>2.8 ITS 2.0 Implementations and Conformance</h3><p>What does it mean to implement ITS 2.0? This specification provides several conformance clauses as the normative answer (see <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance">Section 4: Conformance</a>). The clauses target different types of implementers:</p><ul><li><p>Conformance clauses in <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance-product-schema">Section 4.1: Conformance Type 1: ITS Markup Declarations</a> tell markup vocabulary developers how to add ITS 2.0 markup declarations to their schemas.</p></li><li><p>Conformance clauses in <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance-product-processing-expectations">Section 4.2: Conformance Type 2: The Processing Expectations for ITS Markup</a> tell implementers how to process XML content accordng to ITS 2.0 data categories.</p></li><li><p>Conformance clauses in <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance-product-html-processing-expectations">Section 4.3: Conformance Type 3: Processing Expectations for ITS Markup in HTML</a> tell implementers how to process <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a> content.</p></li><li><p>Conformance clauses in <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance-product-html5-its">Section 4.4: Conformance Type 4: Markup conformance for HTML5+ITS documents</a> tell implementers how ITS 2.0 markup is integrated into <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a>.</p></li></ul><p>The conformance clauses in <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance-product-processing-expectations">Section 4.2: Conformance Type 2: The Processing Expectations for ITS Markup</a> and <a class="section-ref" href="#conformance-product-html-processing-expectations">Section 4.3: Conformance Type 3: Processing Expectations for ITS Markup in HTML</a> clarify how information needs to be made available for iven pieces of markup when processing a dedicated ITS 2.0 data category. To allow for flexibility, an implementation can choose whether it wants to support only ITS 2.0 global or local information, or XML or HTML content. These choices are reflected in separate conformance clauses and also in the <a href="https://github.com/finnle/ITS-2.0-Testsuite/">ITS 2.0 test suite</a>.</p><p>ITS 2.0 processing expectations only define which information needs to be made available. They do not define how that information actually is to be used. This is due to the fact that there is a wide variety of usage scenarios for ITS 2.0, and a wide variety of tools for working with ITS 2.0 is possible. Each of these tools may have its own way of using ITS 2.0 data categories (see <a title="Metadata for the Multilingual Web - Usage Scenarios and Implementations " href="#mlw-metadata-us-impl">[MLW US IMPL]</a> for more information).</p></div></div><div class="div1">
 <h2><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="notation-terminology" id="notation-terminology"></a>3 Notation and Terminology</h2><p>
             <em>This section is normative.</em>
@@ -579,7 +579,7 @@
               and localization of XML schemas and documents.] The concept of a data
             category is independent of its implementation in an XML and HTML environment (e.g.,
             using an element or attribute).</p><p>For each data category, ITS distinguishes between the following:</p><ul><li><p>the prose description, see <a class="section-ref" href="#datacategory-description">Section 8: Description of Data Categories</a></p></li><li><p>schema language-independent formalization, see the "implementation" subsections in
-                <a class="section-ref" href="#datacategory-description">Section 8: Description of Data Categories</a></p></li><li><p>schema language-specific implementations, see <a class="section-ref" href="#its-schemas">Appendix D: Schemas for ITS</a></p></li></ul><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="d0e1576" id="d0e1576"></a>Example 10: A data category and its implementation</div><p>The <a href="#trans-datacat">Translate</a> data category conveys information as
+                <a class="section-ref" href="#datacategory-description">Section 8: Description of Data Categories</a></p></li><li><p>schema language-specific implementations, see <a class="section-ref" href="#its-schemas">Appendix D: Schemas for ITS</a></p></li></ul><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="d0e1628" id="d0e1628"></a>Example 10: A data category and its implementation</div><p>The <a href="#trans-datacat">Translate</a> data category conveys information as
               to whether a piece of content is intended for translation or not.</p><p>The simplest formalization of this prose description on a schema language-independent
               level is a <code class="its-attr-markup">translate</code> attribute with two possible values:
                 "yes" and "no". An implementation on a schema language-specific
@@ -707,26 +707,17 @@
                      <em>2-3:</em> If an application claims to
                 process ITS markup implementing the conformance clauses 2-2 and 2-3, it <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> process that markup with XML
               documents.</p></li><li><p id="its-conformance-2-4">
-                     <em>2-4:</em> After processing ITS information
-                on the basis of conformance clauses <a href="#its-conformance-2-1">2-1</a>, 
-              <a href="#its-conformance-2-2">2-2</a> and <a href="#its-conformance-2-3">2-3</a>, an application <a href="#rfc-keywords">MAY</a> convert an XML document to <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a>, using the
-                algorithm described in <a class="section-ref" href="#conversion-to-nif">Section 5.7: Conversion to NIF</a>.</p></li><li><p id="its-conformance-2-5">
-                     <em>2-5:</em> Non-ITS elements and attributes found in ITS elements <a href="#rfc2119">MAY</a> be ignored.</p></li></ul><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p id="nif-optional-feature">The conformance clause <a href="#its-conformance-2-4">2-4</a> essentially
-              means that the conversion to NIF is an optional feature of ITS 2.0, and that the
-              conversion is independent of whether ITS information has been made available via the
-              global or local selection mechanisms, see conformance clause <a href="#its-conformance-2-1-1">2-1-1</a>.</p></div><p id="its-processing-conformance-claims">Statements related to this conformance type
+                     <em>2-4:</em> Non-ITS elements and attributes found in ITS elements <a href="#rfc2119">MAY</a> be ignored.</p></li></ul><p id="its-processing-conformance-claims">Statements related to this conformance type
               <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> list all <a href="#def-datacat">data
               categories</a> they implement, and for each <a href="#def-datacat">data
               category</a>, which type of selection they support, whether they support processing
-            of XML. If the implementation provides the conversion to NIF (see conformance clause
-              <a href="#its-conformance-2-4">2-4</a>), this <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be stated.</p><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p>The above conformance clauses are directly reflected in the <a href="https://github.com/finnle/ITS-2.0-Testsuite/">ITS 2.0 test suite</a>. All
+            of XML.</p><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p>The above conformance clauses are directly reflected in the <a href="https://github.com/finnle/ITS-2.0-Testsuite/">ITS 2.0 test suite</a>. All
             tests specify which data category is processed (clause <a href="#its-conformance-2-1">2-1</a>); they are relevant for
             (clause <a href="#its-conformance-2-1-1">2-1-1</a>) global or local selection, or both; they require the processing of
             defaults and precedence of selections (clauses <a href="#its-conformance-2-1-2">2-1-2</a> and 
             <a href="#its-conformance-2-1-3">2-1-3</a>); for each data
             category there are tests with linked rules (<a href="#its-conformance-2-2">2-2</a>); and all types of tests are given for
-            XML (clause <a href="#its-conformance-2-3">2-3</a>). In addition, there are test cases for conversion to NIF (clause
-            <a href="#its-conformance-2-4">2-4</a>). Implementers are encouraged to organize their documentation in a similar way, so
+            XML (clause <a href="#its-conformance-2-3">2-3</a>). Implementers are encouraged to organize their documentation in a similar way, so
               that users of ITS 2.0 easily can understand the processing capabilities available.</p></div></div><div class="div2">
 <h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="conformance-product-html-processing-expectations" id="conformance-product-html-processing-expectations"></a>4.3 Conformance Type 3: Processing Expectations for ITS Markup in HTML</h3><p>
                <em>Description:</em> Processors need to compute the ITS information that pertains
@@ -759,13 +750,7 @@
                   <code>rel</code> attribute with the value <code>its-rules</code>.</p></li><li><p id="its-conformance-3-3">
                      <em>3-3:</em> If an application claims to
                 process ITS markup implementing the conformance clauses 3-1 and 3-2, it <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> process that markup within HTML
-              documents.</p></li><li><p id="its-conformance-3-4">
-                     <em>3-4:</em> After processing ITS information
-              on the basis of conformance clauses <a href="#its-conformance-3-1">3-1</a>, 
-              <a href="#its-conformance-3-2">3-2</a> and
-              <a href="#its-conformance-3-3">3-3</a>, an application <a href="#rfc-keywords">MAY</a> convert an <a title="HTML5" href="#html5">[HTML5]</a> document to 
-              <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a>, using the
-              algorithm described in <a class="section-ref" href="#conversion-to-nif">Section 5.7: Conversion to NIF</a>.</p></li></ul><p id="its-html-processing-conformance-claims">Statements related to this conformance
+              documents.</p></li></ul><p id="its-html-processing-conformance-claims">Statements related to this conformance
             type <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> list all <a href="#def-datacat">data
               categories</a> they implement and, for each <a href="#def-datacat">data
               category</a>, which type of selection they support.</p></div><div class="div2">
@@ -851,9 +836,9 @@
               actual query language. The query language is set by <code class="its-attr-markup">queryLanguage</code> attribute
               on <code class="its-elem-markup">rules</code> element. If <code class="its-attr-markup">queryLanguge</code> is not specified XPath 1.0 is
               used as a default query language.</p></div><div class="div3">
-<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="d0e2542" id="d0e2542"></a>5.3.2 XPath 1.0</h4><p>XPath 1.0 is identified by <code>xpath</code> value in <code class="its-attr-markup">queryLanguage</code>
+<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="d0e2530" id="d0e2530"></a>5.3.2 XPath 1.0</h4><p>XPath 1.0 is identified by <code>xpath</code> value in <code class="its-attr-markup">queryLanguage</code>
               attribute.</p><div class="div4">
-<h5><a name="d0e2553" id="d0e2553"></a>5.3.2.1 Absolute selector</h5><p>The absolute selector <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be an XPath expression
+<h5><a name="d0e2541" id="d0e2541"></a>5.3.2.1 Absolute selector</h5><p>The absolute selector <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be an XPath expression
                 that starts with "<code>/</code>". That is, it <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be an <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath/#NT-AbsoluteLocationPath">
                   AbsoluteLocationPath</a> or union of <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath/#NT-AbsoluteLocationPath">
                   AbsoluteLocationPath</a>s as described in <a href="#xpath">XPath 1.0</a>.
@@ -898,14 +883,14 @@
                 be used.</p></div><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p id="css-selectors-and-attributes">CSS selectors have no ability to point to
                 attributes.</p></div><p>CSS Selectors are identified by the value <code>css</code> in the
                 <code class="its-attr-markup">queryLanguage</code> attribute.</p><div class="div4">
-<h5><a name="d0e2767" id="d0e2767"></a>5.3.3.1 Absolute selector</h5><p>An absolute selector <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be interpreted as a
+<h5><a name="d0e2755" id="d0e2755"></a>5.3.3.1 Absolute selector</h5><p>An absolute selector <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be interpreted as a
                 selector as defined in <a title="Selectors Level&#xA;                3" href="#css3-selectors">[Selectors Level 3]</a>. Both simple
                 selectors and groups of selectors can be used.</p></div><div class="div4">
-<h5><a name="d0e2777" id="d0e2777"></a>5.3.3.2 Relative selector</h5><p>A relative selector <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be interpreted as a
+<h5><a name="d0e2765" id="d0e2765"></a>5.3.3.2 Relative selector</h5><p>A relative selector <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> be interpreted as a
                 selector as defined in <a title="Selectors Level&#xA;                3" href="#css3-selectors">[Selectors Level 3]</a>. A selector is
                 not evaluated against the complete document tree but only against subtrees rooted at
                 nodes selected by the selector in the <code class="its-attr-markup">selector</code> attribute.</p></div></div><div class="div3">
-<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="d0e2790" id="d0e2790"></a>5.3.4 Additional query languages</h4><p>ITS processors <a href="#rfc-keywords">MAY</a> support additional query
+<h4><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="d0e2778" id="d0e2778"></a>5.3.4 Additional query languages</h4><p>ITS processors <a href="#rfc-keywords">MAY</a> support additional query
               languages. For each additional query language the processor <a href="#rfc-keywords">MUST</a> define:</p><ul><li><p>the identifier of the query language used in <code class="its-attr-markup">queryLanguage</code>;</p></li><li><p>rules for evaluating an absolute selector to a collection of nodes;</p></li><li><p>rules for evaluating a relative selector to a collection of nodes.</p></li></ul><p>Because future versions of this specification are likely to define additional query
               languages, the following query language identifiers are reserved: <code>xpath</code>,
                 <code>css</code>, <code>xpath2</code>, <code>xpath3</code>, <code>xquery</code>,
@@ -1078,114 +1063,7 @@
                   attribute, as shown in <a href="#EX-link-external-rules-1">Example 16</a></p></li></ul></li><li><p>By associating the rules and the document through a tool-specific mechanism. For
               example, in the case of a command-line tool by providing the paths of both the XML
               document to process and its corresponding external rules file.</p></li></ul></div><div class="div2">
-<h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="conversion-to-nif" id="conversion-to-nif"></a>5.7 Conversion to NIF</h3><p>This section defines an algorithm to convert XML or HTML documents (or their DOM
-            representations) that contain ITS metadata to the RDF format based on <a title="" href="#nif-reference">[NIF]</a>. The conversion results in RDF triples.</p><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p>The algorithm is intended to extract the text from the XML/HTML/DOM for an NLP tool. It can
-              produce a lot of "<span class="quote">phantom</span>" predicates from excessive whitespace, which 1)
-              increases the size of the intermediate mapping and 2) extracts this whitespace as
-              text, and therefore might decrease NLP performance. It is strongly recommended to
-              normalize whitespace in the input XML/HTML/DOM in order to minimize such phantom
-              predicates. A normalized example is given below. Since the whitespace normalization
-              algorithm itself is format dependent (for example, it differs for HTML compared to
-              general XML), no normative algorithm for whitespace normalization is given as part of
-              this specification.</p></div><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p id="its-rdf-ontology-status">The output of the algorithm shown below uses the ITS RDF ontology <a title="ITS RDF Ontology" href="#its-rdf-ontology">[ITS RDF]</a> and its namespace<br/><a href="http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its/rdf#">http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its/rdf#</a>
-                  <br/>This ontology is not a normative part of the ITS 2.0 specification and is being discussed in the <a href="http://www.w3.org/International/its/wiki/ITS-RDF_mapping">ITS Interest Group</a>.</p></div><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-HTML-whitespace-normalization" id="EX-HTML-whitespace-normalization"></a>Example 22: Example (see <a href="examples/html5/EX-HTML-whitespace-normalization.html">source code</a>) of an HTML document with whitespace character normalization as preparation for the conversion to NIF</div><div class="exampleInner"><pre><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;html&gt;</strong><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;body&gt;</strong><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;h2</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">translate</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"yes"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong>Welcome to <strong class="hl-tag" style=color: #000096">&lt;span</strong> 
-   <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its-ta-ident-ref</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dublin"</span> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its-within-text</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"yes"</span>
-   <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">translate</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"no"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong>Dublin<strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/span&gt;</strong> in <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;b</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">translate</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"no"</span> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its-within-text</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"yes"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong>Ireland<strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/b&gt;</strong>!<strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/h2&gt;</strong><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/body&gt;</strong><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/html&gt;</strong></pre></div></div><p id="its2nif-algorithm">The conversion algorithm to generate NIF consists of seven
-            steps:</p><ul><li><p id="its2nif-algorithm-step1">STEP 1: Get an ordered list of all text nodes
-                of the document.</p></li><li><p id="its2nif-algorithm-step2">STEP 2: Generate an XPath expression for each non-empty text node of all leaf elements and memorize them.</p></li><li><p id="its2nif-algorithm-step3">STEP 3: Get the text for each text node and make a tuple with the corresponding XPath expression (X,T). Since the text nodes have a certain order we
-                now have a list of ordered tuples ((x0,t0), (x1,t1), ..., (xn,tn)).</p></li><li><p id="its2nif-algorithm-step4">STEP 4 (optional): Serialize as XML or as RDF.
-                The list with the XPath-to-text mapping can also be kept in memory. Part of a
-                serialization example is given below. The upper part is in RDF Turtle Syntax while the lower part
-                is in XML (the <code>mappings</code> element).</p></li></ul><div class="exampleInner"><div class="exampleOuter"><pre># Turtle example:
-@prefix nif: &lt;http://persistence.uni-leipzig.org/nlp2rdf/ontologies/nif-core#&gt; .
-@prefix itsrdf: &lt;http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its/rdf#&gt; .
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=b0,e0&gt;
- nif:wasConvertedFrom  &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(x0)&gt;  .
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=b1,e1&gt; 
- nif:wasConvertedFrom &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(x1)&gt;  .
-# ...
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=bn,en&gt; 
- nif:wasConvertedFrom &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(xn)&gt; .
-&lt;!-- XML Example --&gt;
-&lt;mappings&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(x0)" b="b0" e="e0" /&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(x1)" b="b1" e="e1" /&gt;
- &lt;!-- ... --&gt; 
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(xn)" b="bn" e="en" /&gt;
-&lt;/mappings&gt;
-</pre></div></div><p>where</p><div class="exampleInner"><div class="exampleOuter"><pre>b0 = 0
-e0 = b0 + (Number of characters of t0) 
-b1 = e0
-e1 = b1 + (Number of characters of t1) 
-...
-bn = e(n-1)
-en = bn + (Number of characters of tn) 
-</pre></div></div><p>Example (continued)</p><div class="exampleInner"><div class="exampleOuter"><pre># Turtle example:
-@prefix nif: &lt;http://persistence.uni-leipzig.org/nlp2rdf/ontologies/nif-core#&gt; .
-@prefix itsrdf: &lt;http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its/rdf#&gt; .
-# "Welcome to "
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=0,11&gt;  
- nif:wasConvertedFrom
- &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/text()[1])&gt;.
-# "Dublin"
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=11,17&gt; 
- nif:wasConvertedFrom
- &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/span[1]/text()[1])&gt;.
-# " in "
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=17,21&gt;
- nif:wasConvertedFrom
- &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/text()[2])&gt; .
-# "Ireland"
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=21,28&gt;
- nif:wasConvertedFrom  
- &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/b[1]/text()[1])&gt; .
-# "!"
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=28,29&gt;
- nif:wasConvertedFrom
- &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/text()[3])&gt; .
-# "Welcome to Dublin Ireland!"
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=0,29&gt;
- nif:wasConvertedFrom
- &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/text())&gt; .
-&lt;!-- XML Example --&gt; 
-&lt;mappings&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/text()[1])" b="0" e="11" /&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/span[1]/text()[1])" b="11" e="17" /&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/text()[2])" b="17" e="21" /&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/b[1]/text()[1])" b="21" e="28" /&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1]/text()[3])" b="28" e="29" /&gt;
- &lt;mapping x="xpath(/html/body[1]/h2[1])" b="0" e="29" /&gt;
-&lt;/mappings&gt;</pre></div></div><ul><li><p id="its2nif-algorithm-step5">STEP 5: Create a context URI and attach the
-              whole concatenated text <code>$(t0+t1+t2+...+tn)</code> of the document as reference.</p></li><li><p id="its2nif-algorithm-step6">STEP 6: Attach any ITS metadata annotations from the XML/HTML/DOM input to the respective NIF URIs.</p></li><li><p id="its2nif-algorithm-step7">STEP 7: Omit all URIs that do not carry annotations (to avoid
-                bloating the data).</p></li></ul><div class="exampleInner"><div class="exampleOuter"><pre>@prefix itsrdf: &lt;http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its/rdf#&gt; .
-@prefix nif: &lt;http://persistence.uni-leipzig.org/nlp2rdf/ontologies/nif-core#&gt;
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=0,29&gt;
-    rdf:type             nif:Context ;
-    rdf:type             nif:RFC5147String ;
-# concatenate the whole text
-    nif:isString         "$(t0+t1+t2+...+tn)" ; 
-    nif:beginIndex	 "0" ;
-    nif:endIndex	 "29" ;
-    itsrdf:translate     "yes";
-    nif:sourceUrl      &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html&gt; .
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=11,17&gt; 
-    rdf:type              nif:RFC5147String ;
-    nif:beginIndex	 "11" ;
-    nif:endIndex	 "17" ;
-    itsrdf:translate     "no";
-    itsrdf:taIdentRef  &lt;http://dbpedia.org/resource/Dublin&gt; ;
-    nif:referenceContext &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=0,29&gt; .
-&lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=21,28&gt; 
-    rdf:type              nif:RFC5147String ;
-    nif:beginIndex	 "21" ;
-    nif:endIndex	 "28" ;
-    itsrdf:translate     "no";
-    nif:referenceContext &lt;http://example.com/exampledoc.html#char=0,29&gt; .
-</pre></div></div><p>A complete sample output in RDF/XML format after step 7, given the input document <a href="#EX-HTML-whitespace-normalization">Example 22</a>, is available at <a href="examples/nif/EX-nif-conversion-output.xml">examples/nif/EX-nif-conversion-output.xml</a>.</p><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p>The conversion to NIF is a possible basis for a natural language processing (NLP) application
-              that creates, for example, named entity annotations. A non-normative algorithm to
-              integrate these annotations into the original input document is given in <a class="section-ref" href="#nif-backconversion">Appendix F: Conversion NIF2ITS</a>. This algorithm is non-normative
-              because many decisions depend on the particular NLP application being used.</p></div></div><div class="div2">
-<h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="its-tool-annotation" id="its-tool-annotation"></a>5.8 ITS Tools Annotation</h3><p>In some cases, it may be important for instances of data categories to be associated
+<h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="its-tool-annotation" id="its-tool-annotation"></a>5.7 ITS Tools Annotation</h3><p>In some cases, it may be important for instances of data categories to be associated
             with information about the processor that generated them. For example, the score of the
               <a href="#mtconfidence">MT Confidence</a> data category (provided via the
               <code class="its-attr-markup">mtConfidence</code> attribute) is meaningful only when the consumer of the
@@ -1201,7 +1079,7 @@
             generated those data category annotations.</p><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><ul><li><p id="annotators-ref-usage-scenarios">Three cases of providing tool
                   information can be expected:</p><ol class="depth1"><li><p>information about tools used for creating or modifying the textual
                       content;</p></li><li><p>information about tools that do 1), but also create ITS annotations, see
-                        <a class="section-ref" href="#list-of-elements-and-attributes">Appendix G: List of ITS 2.0 Global Elements and Local Attributes</a>; </p></li><li><p>information about tools that don’t modify or create content, but just
+                        <a class="section-ref" href="#list-of-elements-and-attributes">Appendix H: List of ITS 2.0 Global Elements and Local Attributes</a>; </p></li><li><p>information about tools that don’t modify or create content, but just
                       create ITS annotations.</p></li></ol><p>
                         <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> is only meant to be used when actual ITS
                   annotation is involved, that is for 2) and 3). To express tool information related
@@ -1227,7 +1105,7 @@
             children elements) and to the attributes of that element.</p><p>On any given node, the information provided by this mechanism is a space-separated list
             of the accumulated references found in the <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> attributes declared
             in the enclosing elements and sorted by data category identifiers. For each data
-            category, the IRI part is the one of the inner-most declaration.</p><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-its-tool-annotation-1" id="EX-its-tool-annotation-1"></a>Example 23: Accumulation and Overriding of the <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> Values</div><p>In this example, the text shows the computed tools reference information for the
+            category, the IRI part is the one of the inner-most declaration.</p><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-its-tool-annotation-1" id="EX-its-tool-annotation-1"></a>Example 22: Accumulation and Overriding of the <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> Values</div><p>In this example, the text shows the computed tools reference information for the
               given node. Note that the references are ordered alphabetically and that the IRI
               values are always the ones of the inner-most declaration.</p><div class="exampleInner"><pre><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;doc</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its:version</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"2.0"</span> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">xmlns:its</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its"</span>
   <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its:annotatorsRef</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"mt-confidence|MT1"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">
@@ -1245,7 +1123,7 @@
   <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;p</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its:annotatorsRef</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"text-analysis|XYZ"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">
    &gt;</strong>This p node: "text-analysis|XYZ mt-confidence|MT1"<strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/p&gt;</strong>
 <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/doc&gt;</strong>
-</pre></div><p>[Source file: <a href="examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-1.xml">examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-1.xml</a>]</p></div><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-its-tool-annotation-2" id="EX-its-tool-annotation-2"></a>Example 24: Example of ITS Tools Annotation</div><p>The <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> attribute is used in this XML document to indicate that
+</pre></div><p>[Source file: <a href="examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-1.xml">examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-1.xml</a>]</p></div><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-its-tool-annotation-2" id="EX-its-tool-annotation-2"></a>Example 23: Example of ITS Tools Annotation</div><p>The <code class="its-attr-markup">annotatorsRef</code> attribute is used in this XML document to indicate that
               information about the processor that generated the <code class="its-attr-markup">mtConfidence</code> values for
               the first two <code>p</code> elements are found in element with <code>id="T1"</code>
               in the external document tools.xml, while that information for the third
@@ -1264,7 +1142,7 @@
       <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its:annotatorsRef</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"mt-confidence|file:///tools.xml#T2"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong> Text translated
         with tool T2<strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/p&gt;</strong>
 <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/doc&gt;</strong>
-</pre></div><p>[Source file: <a href="examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-2.xml">examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-2.xml</a>]</p></div><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-its-tool-annotation-html5-1" id="EX-its-tool-annotation-html5-1"></a>Example 25: Example of ITS Tool Annotation</div><p>The <code class="its-attr-markup">its-annotators-ref</code> attributes are used in this HTML document to
+</pre></div><p>[Source file: <a href="examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-2.xml">examples/xml/EX-its-tool-annotation-2.xml</a>]</p></div><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-its-tool-annotation-html5-1" id="EX-its-tool-annotation-html5-1"></a>Example 24: Example of ITS Tool Annotation</div><p>The <code class="its-attr-markup">its-annotators-ref</code> attributes are used in this HTML document to
               indicate that the <a href="#mtconfidence">MT Confidence</a> annotation on the
               first two <code>span</code> elements come from one MT (French to English) engine,
               while the annotation on the third comes from another (Italian to English) engine. Both
@@ -1300,8 +1178,8 @@
             the following rules:</p><ol class="depth1"><li><p>The attribute name is prefixed with <code>its-</code></p></li><li><p>Each uppercase letter in the attribute name is replaced by <code>-</code>
                 (U+002D) followed by a lowercase variant of the letter.</p></li></ol><p>
             </p><p>
-               <a href="#EX-within-text-local-1">Example 49</a> demonstrates the <a href="#elements-within-text">Elements Within Text</a> data category with the local
-            XML attribute <code class="its-attr-markup">withinText</code>. <a href="#EX-within-text-local-html5-1">Example 50</a> demonstrates the counterpart in HTML, i.e.,
+               <a href="#EX-within-text-local-1">Example 48</a> demonstrates the <a href="#elements-within-text">Elements Within Text</a> data category with the local
+            XML attribute <code class="its-attr-markup">withinText</code>. <a href="#EX-within-text-local-html5-1">Example 49</a> demonstrates the counterpart in HTML, i.e.,
             the local attribute <code class="its-attr-markup">its-within-text</code>.</p><p>Values of attributes, which corresponds to data categories with a predefined set of
             values, <a href="#rfc2119">MUST</a> be matched ASCII-case-insensitively. </p><div class="note"><p class="prefix"><b>Note:</b></p><p>Case of attribute names is also irrelevant given the nature of HTML syntax. So in HTML the <a href="#terminology">terminology data category</a> can be stored as
                 <code class="its-attr-markup">its-term</code>, <code>ITS-TERM</code>, <code>its-Term</code> etc. All of those
@@ -1350,7 +1228,7 @@
             <em>This section is normative.</em>
          </p><p>XHTML documents aimed at public consumption by Web browsers, including HTML5 documents in
           XHTML syntax, <a href="#rfc2119">SHOULD</a> use the syntax described in <a class="section-ref" href="#html5-markup">Section 6: Using ITS Markup in HTML</a> in order to adhere to <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/html-design-principles/#dom-consistency">DOM Consistency
-            HTML Design Principle</a>.</p><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-xhtml-markup-1" id="EX-xhtml-markup-1"></a>Example 26: Using ITS 2.0 markup in XHTML</div><p>This example illustrates the use of ITS 2.0 local markup in XHTML.</p><div class="exampleInner"><pre><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: blue">&lt;!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" 
+            HTML Design Principle</a>.</p><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-xhtml-markup-1" id="EX-xhtml-markup-1"></a>Example 25: Using ITS 2.0 markup in XHTML</div><p>This example illustrates the use of ITS 2.0 local markup in XHTML.</p><div class="exampleInner"><pre><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: blue">&lt;!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" 
 "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"&gt;</strong>
 <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;html</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">xmlns</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"</span> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">xml:lang</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"en"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong>
     <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;head&gt;</strong>
@@ -1374,7 +1252,7 @@
          </p><div class="div2">
 <h3><a href="#contents"><img src="images/topOfPage.gif" align="right" height="26" width="26" title="Go to the table of contents." alt="Go to the table of contents."/></a><a name="datacategories-defaults-etc" id="datacategories-defaults-etc"></a>8.1 Position, Defaults, Inheritance, and Overriding of Data Categories</h3><p>The following table summarizes for each data category which selection, default value,
             and inheritance and overriding behavior apply. It also provides data category
-            identifiers used in <a class="section-ref" href="#its-tool-annotation">Section 5.8: ITS Tools Annotation</a>:</p><ul><li><p id="def-default-values">
+            identifiers used in <a class="section-ref" href="#its-tool-annotation">Section 5.7: ITS Tools Annotation</a>:</p><ul><li><p id="def-default-values">
                      <em>Default values</em> apply if both local and global selection
                 are absent. The default value for the <a href="#trans-datacat">Translate</a>
                 data category, for example, mandates that elements are translatable, and attributes
@@ -1398,7 +1276,7 @@
                 via <a href="#idvalue">ID Value</a> pertains only to the <code>p</code>
                 element. It cannot be used to identify nested elements or attributes.</p></li><li><p>Using <a href="#target-pointer">target pointer</a>, selected
                   <code>source</code> elements have the ITS information that their translation is
-                available in a <code>target</code> element; see <a href="#EX-target-pointer-global-1">Example 66</a>. This information does not
+                available in a <code>target</code> element; see <a href="#EX-target-pointer-global-1">Example 65</a>. This information does not
                 inherit to child elements of <code>target pointer</code>. E.g., the translation of a
                   <code>span</code> element nested in <code>source</code> is not available in a
                 specific <code>target</code> element. Nevertheless, an application is free to use
@@ -1490,7 +1368,7 @@
                      </td></tr><tr><td>
                         <a href="#storagesize">Storage Size</a> (<code>storage-size</code>) </td><td>Yes</td><td>Yes</td><td>Yes</td><td>Yes</td><td>None</td><td>None</td><td>
                         <a href="#EX-storageSize-local-1">local</a>, <a href="#EX-storageSize-global-1">global</a>
-                     </td></tr></tbody></table><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-datacat-behavior-1" id="EX-datacat-behavior-1"></a>Example 27: Defaults, inheritance and overriding behavior of data categories</div><p>In this example, the content of all the <code>data</code> elements is translatable and none of the attributes are translatable, because the default for the <a href="#trans-datacat">Translate</a> data category in elements is "yes" and in attributes is "no", and neither of their values are overridden at all. The first <code class="its-elem-markup">translateRule</code> is overridden by the local <code>its:translate="no"</code> attribute. The content of <code>revision</code>, <code>profile</code>, <code>reviser</code> and <code>locNote</code> elements are not translatable. This is because the default is overridden by the same <code>its:translate="no"</code> that these elements inherit from the local ITS markup in the <code>prolog</code> element. The exception is the <code>field</code> element where the second <code class="its-elem-markup">translateRule</code> takes precedence over the inherited value. The last <code class="its-elem-markup">translateRule</code> indicates that the content of <code>type</code> is not translatable because the global rule takes precedence over the default value.</p><p>The localization note for the two first <code>data</code> elements is the text defined globally with the <code class="its-elem-markup">locNoteRule</code> element. This note is overridden for the last <code>data</code> element by the local <code class="its-attr-markup">locNote</code> attribute.</p><div class="exampleInner"><pre><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;Res</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">xmlns:its</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its"</span> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its:version</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"2.0"</span><strong class"hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong>
+                     </td></tr></tbody></table><div class="exampleOuter"><div class="exampleHeader"><a name="EX-datacat-behavior-1" id="EX-datacat-behavior-1"></a>Example 26: Defaults, inheritance and overriding behavior of data categories</div><p>In this example, the content of all the <code>data</code> elements is translatable and none of the attributes are translatable, because the default for the <a href="#trans-datacat">Translate</a> data category in elements is "yes" and in attributes is "no", and neither of their values are overridden at all. The first <code class="its-elem-markup">translateRule</code> is overridden by the local <code>its:translate="no"</code> attribute. The content of <code>revision</code>, <code>profile</code>, <code>reviser</code> and <code>locNote</code> elements are not translatable. This is because the default is overridden by the same <code>its:translate="no"</code> that these elements inherit from the local ITS markup in the <code>prolog</code> element. The exception is the <code>field</code> element where the second <code class="its-elem-markup">translateRule</code> takes precedence over the inherited value. The last <code class="its-elem-markup">translateRule</code> indicates that the content of <code>type</code> is not translatable because the global rule takes precedence over the default value.</p><p>The localization note for the two first <code>data</code> elements is the text defined globally with the <code class="its-elem-markup">locNoteRule</code> element. This note is overridden for the last <code>data</code> element by the local <code class="its-attr-markup">locNote</code> attribute.</p><div class="exampleInner"><pre><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;Res</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">xmlns:its</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"http://www.w3.org/2005/11/its"</span> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its:version</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"2.0"</span><strong class"hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong>
   <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;prolog</strong> <span class="hl-attribute" style="color: #F5844C">its:translate</span>=<span class="hl-value" style="color: #993300">"no"</span><strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&gt;</strong>
     <strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;revision&gt;</strong>Sep-07-2006<strong class="hl-tag" style="color: #000096">&lt;/revision&gt;</strong>

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Received on Friday, 16 August 2013 15:57:51 UTC