This document is a draft, and is designed to show changes from a previous version. It is presently showing added text,changed text,deleted text,[start]/[end] markers,and Issue Numbers.
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dfn
element to identify the defining instance of a wordHTML 4.x and XHTML 1.x
This technique relates to:
The objective of this technique is to use the dfn
to mark the use of a word or phrase where it is defined. The dfn
element is used to indicate the defining instance of the enclosed term. In other words, it marks the occurrence of the term where the term is defined. Note that it encloses the term, not the definition. This technique would be used in combination with G112: Using inline definitions to provide the definition.
The following code snippet demonstrates the use of the dfn
element.
<p>The Web Content Accessibility Guidelines require that non-text content has a text alternative. <dfn>Non-text content</dfn> is content that is not a sequence of characters that can be programmatically determined or where the sequence is not expressing something in human language; this includes ASCII Art (which is a pattern of characters), emoticons, leetspeak (which is character substitution), and images representing text .</p>
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HTML 4.01 DFN Element
Identify all words that are defined inline in the text, that is, where the definition occurs in a sentence near an occurrence of the word.
Check that each word that is defined inline is contained in a dfn
element.
Check #2 is true.