$Revision$
$Date$
errorname — An error name
errorname ::= (#PCDATA|replaceable|inlinegraphic|inlinemediaobject|indexterm|beginpage)*
ErrorName holds the symbolic name of an error.
            
DocBook provides four elements for identifying the parts of an error message:
               ErrorCode, for the alphanumeric error code (e.g., “-2”);
               ErrorName, for the symbolic name of the error
               (e.g., “ENOENT”);
               ErrorText, for the text of the error message (e.g., “file
                     not found”); and
               ErrorType, for the error type (e.g., “recoverable”).
               
            
Prior to DocBook V4.2, the ErrorName element was the
               recommended element for error messages. However, this left no
               element for symoblic names, so the ErrorText element was added
               and the semantics of the error elements adjusted slightly.
               
            
These elements contain errorname:
                  action, application, attribution, bibliomisc, bridgehead, citation, citetitle, classsynopsisinfo, code, command, computeroutput, database, emphasis, entry, filename, firstterm, foreignphrase, funcparams, funcsynopsisinfo, function, glosssee, glossseealso, glossterm, hardware, interfacename, keycap, lineannotation, link, literal, literallayout, lotentry, member, msgaud, olink, option, optional, para, parameter, phrase, primary, primaryie, productname, programlisting, property, quote, refdescriptor, refentrytitle, refname, refpurpose, remark, screen, screeninfo, secondary, secondaryie, see, seealso, seealsoie, seeie, seg, segtitle, simpara, subtitle, synopsis, systemitem, td, term, termdef, tertiary, tertiaryie, th, title, titleabbrev, tocback, tocentry, tocfront, trademark, ulink, userinput.
               
The following elements occur in errorname:
                  beginpage, indexterm, inlinegraphic, inlinemediaobject, replaceable.