<damageSpan>

<damageSpan> (damaged span of text) marks the beginning of a longer sequence of text which is damaged in some way but still legible. 11.5.1 Damage, Illegibility, and Supplied Text
Modultranscr — 11 Representation of Primary Sources
Attribute att.damaged (@hand, @agent, @degree, @group) (att.dimensions (@unit, @quantity, @extent, @atLeast, @atMost, @min, @max, @precision, @scope)) att.typed (@type, @subtype) att.spanning (@spanTo)
Verwendet von
Kann enthaltenLeeres Element
Deklaration

<rng:element name="damageSpan">
<rng:ref name="att.global.attributes"/>
<rng:ref name="att.damaged.attributes"/>
<rng:ref name="att.dimensions.attributes"/>
<rng:ref name="att.typed.attributes"/>
<rng:ref name="att.spanning.attributes"/>
<rng:empty/>
</rng:element>
element damageSpan
{
   att.global.attributes,
   att.damaged.attributes,
   att.dimensions.attributes,
   att.typed.attributes,
   att.spanning.attributes,
   empty
}

<sch:pattern name="spanTo_required_for_damageSpan">
<sch:rule context="tei:damageSpan">
 <sch:assert test="@spanTo">The spanTo= attribute of <sch:name/> is required.</sch:assert>
</sch:rule>
</sch:pattern>
Beispiel
<p>Paragraph partially damaged. This is the undamaged
portion <damageSpan spanTo="#a34"/>and this the damaged
portion of the paragraph.</p>
<p>This paragraph is entirely damaged.</p>
<p>Paragraph partially damaged; in the middle of this
paragraph the damage ends and the anchor point marks
the start of the <anchor xml:id="a34"/> undamaged part of the text. ...</p>