Example: Law Trove and ORR Position of PI (relative to voucher PDF)
Example demonstrating the placement of figure, table, box, and media PIs for the Law Trove and ORR products.
This is also the same placement for backlist content that does not have a call-out - the PI should be placed on the same page on the Voucher PDF it appears on, inside its own paragraph.
Voucher PDF
XML
<div2 doi="10.1093/he/9780199685646.003.0001.022.0003" id="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-div2-3">
<!-- text cut for brevity -->
<p>
<xrefGrp>Photos <xref ref="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-figureGroup-4">1.2</xref> and <xref ref="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-figureGroup-5">1.3</xref>
</xrefGrp> show buildings
that extend out over pavements and alleyways. Room is left for the passage of pedestrians
underneath. It is quite possible for the part of the building over the alleyway in
<xrefGrp>Photo <xref ref="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-figureGroup-4">1.2</xref>
</xrefGrp>
to be owned separately from other parts of the building. It may have no connection with
the earth itself, but it is still ‘land’. (Such pieces of land are sometimes called
‘flying freeholds’, although, for practical reasons that we shall see later on in the
book, they are often leasehold rather than freehold.)</p>
</div2>
<div2 doi="10.1093/he/9780199685646.003.0001.022.0004" id="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-div2-4">
<titleGroup id="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-titleGroup-17"><title>
<p>
<enumerator>1.1.3</enumerator> Corporeal hereditaments</p></title>
</titleGroup>
<div3 doi="10.1093/he/9780199685646.003.0001.023.0004" id="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-div3-4" role="prelim"><p>It can be seen from the definition in LPA 1925, s. 205(1)(ix) that minerals and
buildings are part of a wider category of <xrefGrp role="definition">
<xref ref="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-note-9">
<b>corporeal
hereditaments</b>
</xref>
</xrefGrp>. This is a very old expression, but it is actually
quite easy to understand. The word ‘corporeal’ means ‘having a physical form’, so it
includes not only minerals and buildings, but also other physical things, such as
plants, fences, etc.</p><p>
<note id="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-note-9" role="definition" type="marginalNote">
<titleGroup id="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-titleGroup-18">
<title>
<p>corporeal hereditaments</p>
</title>
</titleGroup>
<p>any real property having a physical form</p>
</note>
</p><p><?Page pageId="10"?></p><p><?Insert-Figure ID="he-9780199685646-chapter-1-figureGroup-3"?></p><!-- text cut for brevity -->
</div3>
</div2>