Key references can be used to pull text from the key definition. This topic explains how to generate text from a key definition, regardless of whether the key reference also results in a link.
@conkeyref
            attribute. In that case @conkeyref is used to determine the target of a
                @conref attribute, after which the normal @conref
            rules apply.Empty elements that include a key reference with a defined key might get their effective content from the key definition. Empty elements are defined as elements that meet the following criteria:
@alt
                on the <image> element)When an empty element as defined above references a key definition that
            has a child <topicmeta> element, content from that
                <topicmeta> element is used to determine the effective
            content of the referencing element. Effective content from the key definition becomes
            the element content, with the following exceptions: 
<image> elements, effective content is used as
                alternate text, equivalent to creating an <alt> sub-element
                to hold that content.<link> elements, effective content is used as link
                text, equivalent to creating a <linktext> sub-element to hold
                that content.<link> and <xref> elements,
                a key definition can be used to provide a short description in addition to the
                normal effective content. If the key definition includes
                    <shortdesc> inside of <topicmeta>,
                that <shortdesc> should be used to provide effective content
                for a <desc>
                sub-element.<longdescref> and <longquoteref>
                elements are empty elements with no effective content. Key definitions are not used
                to set effective text for these elements.<param> element does not have any effective content, so key definitions do not result in any effective content
                    for <param> elements.<indextermref> element is not completely defined, so
                determining effective content for this element is also left undefined.<abbreviated-form>
                element is an empty element with special rules that
                    determine its effective content.Effective text content is determined using the following set of rules:
<abbreviated-form>
                element, see the rules described in abbreviated-form<topicmeta> in the key definition, effective content is
                taken from the first matching direct child of <topicmeta>.
                For example, given the following key definition, an empty
                    <author> element with the attribute
                    keyref="justMe" would result in the matching content "Just M.
                Name":<keydef keys="justMe" href="http://www.example.com/my-profile" format="html" scope="external">
  <topicmeta>
    <author>Just M. Name</author>
  </topicmeta>
</keydef>@href attribute, content is taken
                from the first <keyword> element inside of
                    <keywords> inside of the
                    <topicmeta>. For example, given the following key
                definition, empty <keyword>, <term>,
                and <dt> elements with the attribute
                    keyref="nohref" would all result in the matching content
                "first":<keydef keys="nohref">
  <topicmeta>
    <keywords><keyword>first</keyword><keyword>second</keyword><keyword>third</keyword></keywords>
  </topicmeta>
</keydef>@href, elements from within
                    <topicmeta> that are legal within the element using
                    @keyref are considered matching text. For example, the
                    <xref> element allows @href, and also
                allows <keyword> as a child. Using the code sample from the
                previous item, an empty <xref> with keyref="nohref" would use all three of these
                elements as text content; after processing, the result would be equivalent
                to:<xref keyref="test"><keyword>first</keyword><keyword>second</keyword><keyword>third</keyword></xref><linktext> is specified inside of
                    <topicmeta>, the contents of
                    <linktext> are used as the effective content. <linktext> element, using
                        <linktext> for effective content is a best practice
                    for cases where all elements getting text from a key definition should result in
                    the same value.<xref> (for
                example, using the <navtitle> or falling back to the URI of
                the link target).When the effective content for a key reference element results in invalid elements,
                those elements SHOULD be generalized to produce
                a valid result. For example, <linktext> in the key
            definition might use a domain specialization of
                <keyword> that is not valid in the key reference context, in
            which case the specialized element should be generalized to
                <keyword>. If the generalized content is also not valid, a
            text equivalent should be used instead. For example, <linktext>
            might include <ph> or a
            specialized <ph> in the key definition, but neither of those are
            valid as the effective content for a <keyword>. In that case, the
            text content of the <ph> should be used.