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see — Part of an index term directing the reader instead to another entry in the index
see ::= (#PCDATA|footnoteref|xref|biblioref|abbrev|acronym|citation|citerefentry|citetitle|citebiblioid|emphasis|firstterm|foreignphrase|glossterm|termdef|footnote|phrase|orgname|quote|trademark|wordasword|personname|link|olink|ulink|action|application|classname|methodname|interfacename|exceptionname|ooclass|oointerface|ooexception|package|command|computeroutput|database|envar|errorcode|errorname|errortype|errortext|filename|function|guibutton|guiicon|guilabel|guimenu|guimenuitem|guisubmenu|hardware|interface|keycap|keycode|keycombo|keysym|literal|code|constant|markup|medialabel|menuchoice|mousebutton|option|optional|parameter|prompt|property|replaceable|returnvalue|sgmltag|structfield|structname|symbol|systemitem|uri|token|type|userinput|varname|nonterminal|anchor|author|authorinitials|corpauthor|corpcredit|modespec|othercredit|productname|productnumber|revhistory|remark|subscript|superscript|inlinegraphic|inlinemediaobject)*
               The use of See in an IndexTerm indicates that
               the reader should be directed elsewhere in the index if they attempt
               to look up this term.
               
            
               The content of See identifies another term in the
               index which the reader should consult instead of
               the current term.
               
            
Suppressed. This element provides data for processing but it is not rendered in the primary flow of text.
It is possible for multiple IndexTerms, taken together,
                  to form an illogical index.  For example, given the following
                  IndexTerms:
                  
                  
<indexterm><primary>Extensible Markup Language</primary> <see>XML</see></indexterm> <indexterm><primary>Extensible Markup Language</primary> <secondary>definition of</secondary> </indexterm>
                  there's no way to construct a logical index because an entry in
                  the index should never have both a see and other
                  content.
                  
               
DocBook cannot detect these errors. You will have to rely on an external process to find them.
                  
                  The InterfaceDefinition
                  element will be discarded in DocBook V4.0. It will no longer be available
                  in the content model of this element.
                  
               
The following elements occur in see:
                  abbrev, acronym, action, anchor, application, author, authorinitials, biblioref, citation, citebiblioid, citerefentry, citetitle, classname, code, command, computeroutput, constant, corpauthor, corpcredit, database, email, emphasis, envar, errorcode, errorname, errortext, errortype, exceptionname, filename, firstterm, footnote, footnoteref, foreignphrase, function, glossterm, guibutton, guiicon, guilabel, guimenu, guimenuitem, guisubmenu, hardware, inlinegraphic, inlinemediaobject, interface, interfacename, keycap, keycode, keycombo, keysym, link, literal, markup, medialabel, menuchoice, methodname, modespec, mousebutton, nonterminal, olink, ooclass, ooexception, oointerface, option, optional, orgname, othercredit, package, parameter, personname, phrase, productname, productnumber, prompt, property, quote, remark, replaceable, returnvalue, revhistory, sgmltag, structfield, structname, subscript, superscript, symbol, systemitem, termdef, token, trademark, type, ulink, uri, userinput, varname, wordasword, xref.
               
indexentry, indexterm, primary, primaryie, secondary, secondaryie, seealso, seealsoie, seeie, tertiary, tertiaryie.