The NOTE element is designed for use as admonishments such as notes, cautions or warnings, as commonly used in technical documentation. The CLASS attribute specifies the type of the element and is typically associated with different graphics such as a road traffic warning sign.
ID
An SGML identifier used as the target for hypertext links or for naming particular elements in
associated style sheets. Identifiers are NAME tokens and must be unique within the scope of the current
document.
LANG
This is one of the ISO standard language abbreviations, e.g. "en.uk" for the variety of
English spoken in the United Kingdom. It can be used by parsers to select language specific choices for
quotation marks, ligatures and hyphenation rules. The language attribute is composed from the two letter
language code from ISO 639, optionally followed by a period and a two letter country code from ISO
3166.
CLASS
This a space separated list of SGML NAME tokens and is used to subclass tag names. By
convention, class names are interpreted hierarchically, with the most general class on the left and the most
specific on the right, where classes are separated by a period. The CLASS attribute is most commonly used
to attach a different style to some element, but it is recommended that where practical class names should be
picked on the basis of the element's semantics, because this permitsother uses, such as restricting search
through documents by matching on element class names. Apart from the values suggested above, the
conventions for choosing class names are outside the scope of this document.
CLEAR
This attribute is common to all block-like elements. When text flows around a figure or table in the
margin, you sometimes want to start the note below the figure rather than alongside it. The CLEAR attribute
allows you to move down unconditionally:
SRC
Specifies an image to appear preceding the note. The image is specified as a URI. This attribute
may appear together with the MD attribute.
MD
Specifies a message digest or cryptographic checksum for the associated graphic specified by the
SRC attribute. It is used when you want to be sure that a linked object is indeed the same one that the author
intended, and hasn't been modified in any way. For instance,
MD="md5:jV2OfH+nnXHU8bnkPAad/mSQlTDZ" specifies an MD5 checksum encoded as a
base64 character string. The MD attribute is generally allowed for all elements which support URI based
links.
<NOTE> is legal within:
<BANNER>, <BODYTEXT>, <DD>, <DIV>, <FIGTEXT>,
<FN>, <FORM>, <LI>, <NOTE>, <TD>, <TH>
The following markup can be used within <NOTE>
<A>, <ABBREV>, <ACRONYM>, <ADDRESS>, <AU>, <B>,
<BIG>, <BLOCKQUOTE>, <BQ>, <BR>, <CITE>, <CODE>,
<DEL>, <DFN>, <DIR>, <DIV>, <DL>, <EM>, <FIG>,
<FN>, <FORM>, <H1>, <H2>, <H3>, <H4>, <H5>, <H6>,
<HR>, <I>, <IMG>, <INS>, <ISINDEX>, <KBD>, <LANG>,
<MATH>, <MENU>, <NOTE>, <OL>, <P>, <PERSON>, <PRE>,
<Q>, <S>, <SAMP>, <SMALL>, <STRONG>, <SUB>, <SUP>,
<TAB>, <TABLE>, <TT>, <U>, <UL>, <VAR>
<NOTE><STRONG>WARNING:</STRONG> This product is dangerous!</NOTE>