<type>Element</type><name>formula</name><comment>the element formula is a section of the preface or preamble that contains a formulaic expression that is systematically or frequently present in a preface or a preamble and has e precise legal meaning (e.g. an enacting formula). Use the refersTo attribute for the specification of the actual type of formula.</comment>
<div><h3>id (as an attribute name)</h3><p>denotes an attribute whose value should be interpreted as if declared to be of type ID. This name is reserved by virtue of its definition in the xml:id specification.</p><p>See<a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-id/">http://www.w3.org/TR/xml-id/</a>for information about this attribute.</p></div>
xml:lang
union of(xs:language, restriction of xs:string)
optional
<div><h3>lang (as an attribute name)</h3><p>denotes an attribute whose value is a language code for the natural language of the content of any element; its value is inherited. This name is reserved by virtue of its definition in the XML specification.</p></div><div><h4>Notes</h4><p>Attempting to install the relevant ISO 2- and 3-letter codes as the enumerated possible values is probably never going to be a realistic possibility.</p><p>See BCP 47 at<a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/bcp/bcp47.txt">http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/bcp/bcp47.txt</a>and the IANA language subtag registry at<a href="http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry">http://www.iana.org/assignments/language-subtag-registry</a>for further information.</p><p>The union allows for the 'un-declaration' of xml:lang with the empty string.</p></div>
xml:space
restriction of xs:NCName
optional
<div><h3>space (as an attribute name)</h3><p>denotes an attribute whose value is a keyword indicating what whitespace processing discipline is intended for the content of the element; its value is inherited. This name is reserved by virtue of its definition in the XML specification.</p></div>
Source
<xsd:element name="formula"><xsd:annotation><xsd:documentation><type>Element</type><name>formula</name><comment>the element formula is a section of the preface or preamble that contains a formulaic expression that is systematically or frequently present in a preface or a preamble and has e precise legal meaning (e.g. an enacting formula). Use the refersTo attribute for the specification of the actual type of formula.</comment></xsd:documentation></xsd:annotation><xsd:complexType><xsd:complexContent><xsd:extension base="blocksreq"><xsd:attributeGroup ref="name"/></xsd:extension></xsd:complexContent></xsd:complexType></xsd:element>