<anchorkey>
The <anchorkey>
element allows an author to define a
@conref
target that will be resolved dynamically when rendered for an end user
of the content. This element is useful when doing an initial process of the DITA content prior
to final rendering of the content; it allows specified keys to be preserved after that process,
and conref relationships which use that key will not be resolved during that initial
process.
When a @keyref
attribute is specified on an <anchorkey>
element, it indicates that any conref relationships using that key will not be resolved.
Applications that support run-time resolution of @conref
with keys will then
be able to dynamically resolve this @conref
at display time.
There is no difference between specifying <anchorkey>
within a map (in
<topicmeta>
) and specifying <anchorkey>
within a topic. In both cases, processors are instructed to delay resolution of that key for
the current set of information. However, the best practice is to only use
<anchorkey>
within a map. If it is specified in a topic, that topic
will define a usage for the key for every user of that topic. This makes the topic less
portable, because users that do not want to delay resolution of that specific key will not
be able to include the topic in their information.
Many publishing systems for which DITA is used as a source format do not have a way to dynamically resolve content references; those systems will not see any benefit from this element. When DITA is used for those systems, behaviors related to this element are ignored.
See appendix for information about this element in OASIS document type shells.
+ topic/keyword delay-d/anchorkey
In this example, a set of information contains multiple components. Some references to component
A use keys rather than a direct reference, so that @conref
can be redirected
to a different component when component A is not installed. The keys might be exported, in addition to the IDs, so that some
references become bound to the actual component while other references might be redirected.
<map>
<topicref keys="componentAconfig commonconfig"
href="componentA/configA.dita#configA">
<topicmeta>
<exportanchors>
<anchorkey keyref="commonconfig"/>
<anchorid id="step1"/>
<anchorid id="step2"/>
</exportanchors>
</topicmeta>
</topicref>
</map>
The @keys
attributes declares two distinct keys that can be used to refer to this topic (componentAconfig and commonconfig). Only the
second is preserved using <anchorkey>
. A task topic from another
component might reuse steps within this topic in a variety of
ways.
<steps>
<step conkeyref="componentAconfig/step1"><cmd/></step>
<step conkeyref="componentAconfig/step1.5"><cmd/></step>
<step conkeyref="commonconfig/step2"><cmd/></step>
<step conkeyref="commonconfig/step2.5"><cmd/></step>
<step><cmd>And that is the end of that</cmd></step>
</steps>
<step>
becomes
<step
conref="componentA/configA.dita#configA/step1"><cmd/></step>
. At that
point the <anchorid>
element instructs the step1 ID to be
preserved; for runtime applications which support it, this relationship will be preserved
in the processed DITA output.<step>
with the same key becomes <step
conref="componentA/configA.dita#configA/step1.5"><cmd/></step>
. However,
conref relationships to step1.5 are not preserved, so this conref should be resolved into
static content.<step>
three, the map instructs that both the key commonconfig and
the ID step2 should be preserved in any content generated for this DITA topic. For formats
that support runtime resolution through keys, a process must convert the
@conkeyref
value into an equivalent value for that format.<step>
four is delayed, the
specific element that is referenced should not be delayed. Thus the fourth step becomes
<step
conref="componentA/configA.dita#configA/step2.5"><cmd/></step>
. This
value is then processed as an ordinary @conref
value.This allows the information assembler to resolve references that must be to componentA while deferring references that can be fulfilled by alternative component content.
<anchorid>
element cannot reference
an element with the usual topicid/elementid format. If the two
<anchorid>
elements in the example had been set to config/step1 and
config/step2, then they would only ever apply in a topic with id="config". It would not be
possible to redirect the key to another topic, but still preserve conref behaviors as
desired.@conref
resolution for an entire topic using the key. If
@conkeyref
on a task topic element is set to "componentAconfig", which
is not delayed, the @conref
will be evaluated as usual. However, if
@conkeyref
on the task is set to "commonconfig", which is delayed,
resolution of @conref
on that element should be delayed by a
processor.The following attributes are available on this element: Universal attribute group, outputclass, and the attribute defined below.
@keyref
(REQUIRED)@conref
might be resolved at run-time when an end user is reading
the content.