<audience>The <audience> metadata element indicates, through the value of
its @type attribute, the intended audience for a topic.
Since a topic can have multiple audiences, you can include multiple audience elements. For
each audience you specify, you can identify the high-level task they are trying to
accomplish with the @job attribute, and the level of experience expected
with the @experiencelevel attribute. The
<audience> element can be used to
provide a more detailed definition of values used throughout the map or topic on the
@audience attribute.
Many of the attributes on the <audience> element have enumerated
values, which can be restricted by using constraints or
extended by using associated attributes. For instance, the @othertype
attribute can be used to extend the audience type enumeration.
See appendix for information about this element in OASIS document type shells.
- topic/audience
For a command reference topic for experienced programmers, the following might be an appropriate indication of that audience:
<audience type="programmer" job="programming" experiencelevel="expert"/>
The following attributes are available on this element: Universal attribute group and the attributes defined below.
@type@type attribute
on many other DITA elements. Beginning with DITA 1.2, values in this attribute
are not limited to a small number of choices; the following values were used in DITA 1.0
and DITA 1.1, and are still provided as sample values: user,
purchaser, administrator,
programmer, executive,
services, other, and -dita-use-conref-target.@othertype@type attribute value list. This value is used as the user-provided
audience when the @type attribute value is set to
"other."@job@otherjob@job attribute value is "other" the value of this
attribute is used to identify a kind of job other than the default ones provided by the
@job attribute.@experiencelevel@name<audience> element with values used in
the @audience attribute.