Key references can resolve as links, as text, or as both. Within a map, they also can be used to create or supplement information on a topic reference. This topic covers information that is common to all key processing, regardless of how the key is used.
If both @keyref and @href attributes are specified on
                an element, the @href value MUST be used as a fallback address when the key name is
                undefined. If both @conkeyref and @conref attributes
                are specified on an element, the @conref value MUST be used as a fallback
                address when the key name is undefined.
The attributes that are common to the key-defining element and the key-referencing
                element, other than the @keys,
                    @processing-role, and @id attributes, are
                combined as for content references, including the special processing for the
                    @xml:lang, @dir, and @translate
                attributes. There is no special processing associated with either the
                    @locktitle or the @lockmeta attributes when
                attributes are combined.
The effective key definitions for a key space might be affected by conditional processing (filtering). Processors SHOULD perform conditional processing before determining the effective key definitions. However, processors might determine effective key definitions before filtering. Consequently, different processors might produce different effective bindings for the same map when there are key definitions that might be filtered out based on their filtering attributes.
If a topic that contains key references is reused in multiple key scopes within a
                given root map such that its references resolve differently in each use context, processors MUST produce multiple copies of the source topic in
                resolved output for each distinct set of effective key definitions that are
                referenced by the topic. In such cases, authors can use the @copy-to
                attribute to specify different source URIs for each reference to
                    a topic.
If a referencing element contains a key reference with an undefined
                key, it is processed as if there were no key reference, and the value of the
                    @href attribute is used as the reference. If the
                    @href attribute is not specified, the element is not treated as
                a navigation link. If it is an error for the element to be empty, an implementation
                    MAY give an error message;
                it also MAY recover from this
                error condition by leaving the key reference element empty.