<g>

<g> (character or glyph) represents a glyph, or a non-standard character. [5 Characters, Glyphs, and Writing Modes]
Module gaiji — Characters, Glyphs, and Writing Modes
Attributes
ref⚓︎ points to a description of the character or glyph intended.
Status Optional
Datatype teidata.pointer
Member of
Contained by
analysis: c cl interp m pc phr s w
figures: cell
gaiji: mapping
iso-fs: string
linking: ab seg
spoken: u writing
tagdocs: eg memberOf
textcrit: lem rdg wit witDetail
verse: rhyme
May contain Character data only
Note

The name g is short for gaiji, which is the Japanese term for a non-standardized character or glyph.

Example
<g ref="#ctlig">ct</g>
This example points to a glyph element with the identifier ctlig like the following:
<glyph xml:id="ctlig">
<!-- here we describe the particular ct-ligature intended -->
</glyph>
Example
<g ref="#per-glyph">per</g>
The medieval brevigraph per could similarly be considered as an individual glyph, defined in a glyph element with the identifier per-glyph as follows:
<glyph xml:id="per-glyph">
<!-- ... -->
</glyph>
Content model
<content>
 <textNode/>
</content>
Schema Declaration
<rng:element name="g">
 <rng:ref name="att.global.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.global.rendition.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.global.linking.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.global.analytic.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.global.facs.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.global.change.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.global.responsibility.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.global.source.attributes"/>
 <rng:ref name="att.typed.attributes"/>
 <rng:optional>
  <rng:attribute name="ref">
   <rng:ref name="teidata.pointer"/>
  </rng:attribute>
 </rng:optional>
 <rng:text/>
</rng:element>
element g
{
   att.global.attributes,
   att.global.rendition.attributes,
   att.global.linking.attributes,
   att.global.analytic.attributes,
   att.global.facs.attributes,
   att.global.change.attributes,
   att.global.responsibility.attributes,
   att.global.source.attributes,
   att.typed.attributes,
   attribute ref { teidata.pointer }?,
   text
}