Notes and processing instructions following themed features
It is important to ensure that content that is not in direct relation to a themed feature is not captured within a themed feature. Take careful care to ensure that note elements and processing instructions for tables, figures, or boxes that follow directly after themed features are captured in a new division outside of the themed feature.
Features for frontlist content will be noted by typecodes that indicate both the beginning and end of a feature. Backlist content may have additional instructions provided that will denote where features start and stop if needed.
There are some cases where notes, figures, boxes, or tables will occur naturally within a feature. But notes, figures, boxes, or tables that occur directly after a themed feature and are not indicated as part of the feature, must be captured separately from the themed feature. Do this by capturing these items within the next division or as single items within a new division if needed. For processing instructions that can not go within the next division because that division starts a new heading level and are not indicated as part of a themed feature, create a dummy untitled division that holds a single p element containing the processing instruction.
Source Print
Where the shaded square boxes are a type of feature, followed by an image followed by boxedMatter followed by another feature. The figure and boxedMatter do not belong to either feature, so must be placed in their own division.
XML Example
<div5 doi="10.1093/he/9780199639809.003.0002.025.0203" id="he-9780199639809-chapter-2-div5-203" role="FT9">
<p fullOut="Y">The first case to confirm horizontal direct effects was <b>Case 43/75
<i>Defrenne</i> v <i>Sabena (No. 2)</i>
</b> in which the rights of an air hostess for
equal pay guaranteed under old Article 119 EEC (now 157 TFEU) were upheld against the
employing airline Sabena, which was in breach of the
obligation.<?Page pageId="194"?>
<milestone id="he-9780199639809-chapter-2-milestone-194" unit="page" num="194"/>
</p>
</div5>
<div5 doi="10.1093/he/9780199639809.003.0002.025.0204" id="he-9780199639809-chapter-2-div5-204">
<p><?Insert-Figure ID="he-9780199639809-chapter-2-figureGroup-3"?></p>
<p><?Insert-boxedMatter ID="he-9780199639809-chapter-2-boxedMatter-23"?></p>
</div5>
<div5 doi="10.1093/he/9780199639809.003.0002.025.0205" id="he-9780199639809-chapter-2-div5-205" role="FT9">
<p fullOut="Y">Article 12 EC (now 18 TFEU), on the general non-discrimination on the grounds
of nationality, which is imposed on the member states was found to be capable of
horizontal direct effects in <b>Case 36/74 <i>Walrave and Koch</i>.</b> This is very
important because it can be relied on by the Court of Justice and indeed individuals in
many circumstances.</p>
</div5>