Used to mark text that should appear in a non-proportional font, such as courier, for display or print
This is common for computer code examples, man-machine dialogues, etc., that are inline with other text. If spaces and line breaks also need to be preserved, use the block structural element <preformat>.
<!ELEMENT monospace (#PCDATA %emphasized-text;)* >
Any combination of:
<addr-line> Address Line; <aff> Affiliation; <alt-title> Alternate Title; <article-title> Article Title; <attrib> Attribution; <bold> Bold; <book-title> Book Title; <chem-struct> Chemical Structure (Display); <citation> Citation; <collab> Collaborative (Group) Author; <collection-name> Collection Name; <comment> Comment in a Citation; <conf-loc> Conference Location; <conf-name> Conference Name; <copyright-statement> Copyright Statement; <corresp> Correspondence Information; <def-head> Definition List: Definition Head; <degrees> Degree(s); <disp-formula> Formula, Display; <edition> Edition, Cited; <etal> Et Al; <ext-link> External Link; <fax> Fax Number: in an Address; <font> Font; <given-names> Given (First) Names; <gov> Government Report, Cited; <inline-formula> Formula, Inline; <inline-supplementary-material> Inline Supplementary Material; <institution> Institution Name: in an Address; <issue> Issue Number; <italic> Italic; <kwd> Keyword; <label> Label (Of a Figure, Reference, Etc.); <meta-name> Metadata Data Name for Custom Metadata; <meta-value> Metadata Data Name For Custom Metadata; <monospace> Monospace Text (Typewriter Text); <named-content> Named Special (Subject) Content; <on-behalf-of> On Behalf of; <overline> Overline; <p> Paragraph; <patent> Patent Number, Cited; <phone> Phone Number: in an Address; <prefix> Prefix; <preformat> Preformatted Text; <publisher-loc> Publisher’s Location; <publisher-name> Publisher’s Name; <related-article> Related Article Information; <role> Role or Function Title of Contributor; <sc> Small Caps; <series> Series; <source> Source; <std> Standard, Cited; <strike> Strike Through; <sub> Subscript; <subtitle> Subtitle; <suffix> Suffix; <sup> Superscript; <supplement> Supplement Information; <surname> Surname; <target> Target of an Internal Link; <td> Table Data Cell (XHTML table model); <term> Definition List: Term; <term-head> Definition List: Term Head; <th> Table Header Cell (XHTML table model); <title> Title; <trans-source> Translated Source; <trans-title> Translated Title; <underline> Underline; <uri> Uniform Resource Indicator (URI); <verse-line> Line of a Verse; <volume> Volume Number; <volume-id> Volume Identifier; <xref> X(cross) Reference
... <sec> ... <p>...The repertoire of tags is constructed by a “mix and divide” combinatorial synthesis of all possible eight-word combinations. There are 8<sup>8</sup> such combinations, forming a tag repertoire of 16,777,216 sequences 32 bases long. An example of one tag and its anti-tag complement is shown below:</p> <p><monospace>5′-TACT.TTAC.ACAT.ATCA.CTTT.CTTT.CAAA.AATC-3′ </monospace></p> <p><monospace>3′-ATGA.AATG.TGTA.TAGT.GAAA.GAAA.GTTT.TTAG-5′</monospace></p> <p>Because of the words used to construct the tag repertoire ...</p> ...</sec> ...
format.ent