Container element for a group of figures that are to be displayed together
For a detailed discussion on the use of <fig-group>, see Figures and Graphics.
One figure may contain many graphics. This grouping element is explicitly to combine more than one <fig>.
The @position attribute may be used to indicate whether this element must be anchored at its exact location within the text or whether it may float, for example, to the top of the next page, into the next column, to the end of a logical file, or within a separate window.
<!ELEMENT fig-group %fig-group-model; >
(label?, (caption)?, (alt-text | long-desc | email | ext-link | multi-link | uri)*, (fig | alternatives | graphic | media)*)
The following, in order:
<abstract>, <ack>, <app>, <app-group>, <bio>, <body>, <boxed-text>, <disp-quote>, <glossary>, <license-p>, <named-content>, <notes>, <p>, <ref-list>, <sec>, <styled-content>, <trans-abstract>
...
<fig-group id="dogpix4">
<caption><title>Figures 12-14 Bonnie Lassie</title>
<p>Three perspectives on My Dog</p></caption>
<fig id="fg-12">
<label>a.</label>
<caption><p>View A: From the Front, Laughing</p></caption>
<graphic xlink:href="frontView.png"/>
</fig>
<fig id="fg-13">
<label>b.</label>
<caption><p>View B: From the Side, Best Profile</p></caption>
<graphic xlink:href="sideView.png"/>
</fig>
<fig id="fg-14">
<label>c.</label>
<caption><p>View C: In Motion, A Blur on Feet</p></caption>
<graphic xlink:href="motionView.png"/>
</fig>
</fig-group>
...
display3.ent