--- modules/damieng/clean_xml/loncapa.xsd 2015/04/30 17:45:22 1.5 +++ modules/damieng/clean_xml/loncapa.xsd 2015/05/01 20:32:24 1.7 @@ -1347,6 +1347,8 @@ 3. followed by any number of the following two things, separated by semi-colons: (a) a comma-separated list of as many numbers as there are variables, which specifies one sampling point, OR (b) a comma-separated list of as many numbers as there are variables, followed by a colon, followed by another list of as many numbers as there are variables, followed by a #, followed by an integer. + + a) specifies one point to sample. b) specifies a range for each variable, and the system will take as many random samples from that range as the number after the #. @@ -1398,11 +1400,9 @@ This attribute contains what is displayed when the problem is in "Show Answer" mode. - You will want to use it so that the students can see the correct answer after - the "Show Answer Date" configured when the problem is assigned in the course space. + You will want to use it so that the students can see the correct answer after the "Show Answer Date" configured when the problem is assigned in the course space. - This is usually the name of a Perl string variable (starting with '$') - created in a Perl script before the response. + This is usually the name of a Perl string variable (starting with '$') created in a Perl script before the response. @@ -4796,19 +4796,6 @@ - - - - Perl Script Block - - If the attribute type is set to “loncapa/perl” the enclosed data is a Perl script which is evaluated inside the Perl safe space. The return value of the script is ignored. - - - - - - - @@ -5216,7 +5203,13 @@ - + + + + Option to force the math rendering for this element. + + + @@ -5373,7 +5366,7 @@ - + @@ -5582,64 +5575,72 @@ - + + Perl Script Block or Javascript + + If the attribute type is set to “loncapa/perl” the enclosed data is a Perl script which is evaluated inside the Perl safe space. The return value of the script is ignored. + The HTML <script> element is used to embed or reference an executable script within an HTML or XHTML document. Scripts without async or defer attributes, as well as inline scripts, are fetched and executed immediately, before the browser continues to parse the page. - - - - - - This attribute specifies the URI of an external script; this can be used as an alternative to embedding a script directly within a document. script elements with an src attribute specified should not have a script embedded within its tags. - - - - - - - This attribute identifies the scripting language of code embedded within a script element or referenced via the element’s src attribute. This is specified as a MIME type; examples of supported MIME types include text/javascript, text/ecmascript, application/javascript, and application/ecmascript. - - - - - - - Like the type attribute, this attribute identifies the scripting language in use. Unlike the type attribute, however, this attribute’s possible values were never standardized. The type attribute should be used instead. - - - - - - - This Boolean attribute is set to indicate to a browser that the script is meant to be executed after the document has been parsed. Since this feature hasn't yet been implemented by all other major browsers, authors should not assume that the script’s execution will actually be deferred. The defer attribute shouldn't be used on scripts that don't have the src attribute. Since Gecko 1.9.2, the defer attribute is ignored on scripts that don't have the src attribute. However, in Gecko 1.9.1 even inline scripts are deferred if the defer attribute is set. - - - - - - - - - - - - HTML5 only. - Set this Boolean attribute to indicate that the browser should, if possible, execute the script asynchronously. It has no effect on inline scripts (i.e., scripts that don't have the src attribute). - - - - - - - - - - + + + + + + + This attribute specifies the URI of an external script; this can be used as an alternative to embedding a script directly within a document. script elements with an src attribute specified should not have a script embedded within its tags. + + + + + + + This attribute identifies the scripting language of code embedded within a script element or referenced via the element’s src attribute. This is specified as a MIME type; examples of supported MIME types include text/javascript, text/ecmascript, application/javascript, and application/ecmascript. + + If the attribute type is set to “loncapa/perl” the enclosed data is a Perl script which is evaluated inside the Perl safe space. The return value of the script is ignored. + + + + + + + Like the type attribute, this attribute identifies the scripting language in use. Unlike the type attribute, however, this attribute’s possible values were never standardized. The type attribute should be used instead. + + + + + + + This Boolean attribute is set to indicate to a browser that the script is meant to be executed after the document has been parsed. Since this feature hasn't yet been implemented by all other major browsers, authors should not assume that the script’s execution will actually be deferred. The defer attribute shouldn't be used on scripts that don't have the src attribute. Since Gecko 1.9.2, the defer attribute is ignored on scripts that don't have the src attribute. However, in Gecko 1.9.1 even inline scripts are deferred if the defer attribute is set. + + + + + + + + + + + + HTML5 only. + Set this Boolean attribute to indicate that the browser should, if possible, execute the script asynchronously. It has no effect on inline scripts (i.e., scripts that don't have the src attribute). + + + + + + + + + + + @@ -6596,28 +6597,28 @@ - Bold + The HTML <b> Element represents a span of text stylistically different from normal text, without conveying any special importance or relevance. It is typically used for keywords in a summary, product names in a review, or other spans of text whose typical presentation would be boldfaced. Another example of its use is to mark the lead sentence of each paragraph of an article. - Italic + The HTML <i> Element represents a range of text that is set off from the normal text for some reason, for example, technical terms, foreign language phrases, or fictional character thoughts. It is typically displayed in italic type. - Superscript + The HTML Superscript Element (<sup>) defines a span of text that should be displayed, for typographic reasons, higher, and often smaller, than the main span of text. - Subscript + The HTML Subscript Element (<sub>) defines a span of text that should be displayed, for typographic reasons, lower, and often smaller, than the main span of text.