A given DITA map or topic document is governed by a DITA document type that defines the set of structural modules (topic or map types), domain modules, and constraints modules that the map or topic can use.
The DITA document type is defined entirely by the set of modules declared on the @domains attribute of the document's root element and by the values of the @class attributes of all the elements in the document. If the @domains attribute declares both structural and domain vocabulary modules, then the @domains attribute by itself serves to define the DITA document type. The information on the @domains and @class attributes is sufficient to implement all DITA-defined processing and constraint checking on documents (for example, determining if a referenced element in a content reference has a set of modules compatible with the modules used by the referencing element's document).
Thus, DITA does not require that conforming DITA documents have an associated DTD, XSD, or other formal document type definition as long as all required attributes are explicit in document instances. However, most DITA documents have an associated DTD or XML schema document by which the documents can be validated using normal XML processors and that can provide default values for the @domains and @class attributes, in particular. In addition, while the DITA specification only defines coding requirements for DTDs and XML schema documents, conforming DITA documents may use other document type constraint languages, such as RelaxNG or Schematron.
Per the coding requirements for DITA document types, document type shells are always implemented as a top-level file that only includes and configures vocabulary modules—they never directly define new element or attribute types.
While the DITA specification includes a starter set of document type shells for common combinations of modules, those document type shells are not mandatory.
DITA document type shells must follow the coding requirements defined in this specification. This ensures consistency of implementation and also serves to make the task of creating document type shells almost entirely mechanical.
Return to main page.
OASIS DITA Version 1.2 -- OASIS Standard, 1 December 2010
Copyright © OASIS Open 2005, 2010. All Rights Reserved.