<release-date>
Release-Date
An important date in the life of a standard, such as the date it was first published or the date it was reinstated. The attributes @date-type and @std-type should be used to specify what event the date names.
Remarks
Date Type Attribute: @date-type is used to name events in the publishing cycle of the standards document (not in the lifecycle of the standard). Thus date types include events such as “published”, “editorial-change”, or “stabilized-maintenance”.
Standard Type Attribute: A
@std-type attribute is used to name events (standards document types) in the lifecycle of the standard, such as
“addenda” (which creates a new product, with a new designation that typically adds to a previous dated designation) or “amendment” (which replaces a previously published dated standard and also adds to a previous dated designation).
The original publication of a standard will carry a @date-type of “published” and a @std-type attribute of “new-standard”:
<release-date date-type="published" std-type="new-standard">
Later corrections, amendments, editions, and alternate language
versions for a standard will all carry this same release date naming the original publication; but they will also carry additional <release-date> elements that name the different dates on which they are published and the different types of lifecycle events they represent.
Specific Use Attribute: By design, the <release-date> element does not take an @specific-use attribute. If a date does not fit neatly into the @date-type and @std-type attributes just described, then that date should be tagged as a <meta-date> element.
Attributes
Model Description
Text, numbers, or special characters, zero or more
This element may be contained in:
Example 1
...
<iso-meta>
...
<content-language>en</content-language>
<std-ref type="undated">ISO 2560</std-ref>
<std-ref type="dated">ISO 2560:2009</std-ref>
<doc-ref>ISO 2560:2009(en)</doc-ref>
<release-date iso-8601-date="2009-05-30"
date-type="published">2009-05-30</release-date>
...
</iso-meta>
...
Example 2
...
<std-meta>
...
<doc-ref>...</doc-ref>
<release-date
iso-8601-date="2014-12-01"
date-type="published"
std-type="new-standard">2014-12-01</release-date>
<comm-ref>...</comm-ref>
...
</std-meta>
...