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July 29, 2008 21:11
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<!-- DTD for TV listings | |
This is a DTD to represent a TV listing. It doesn't explicitly group | |
programmes by day or by channel, instead broadcast time and channel | |
are attributes of the 'programme' element. Optionally, data about the | |
TV channels used can be stored in 'channel' elements. | |
Data about a TV programme are stored in the subelements of element | |
'programme', but metadata such as when it will be broadcast are stored | |
as attributes. | |
Many of the details have a 'lang' attribute so that you can | |
store them in multiple languages or have mixed languages in a single | |
listing. This 'lang' should be the two-letter code such as 'en' or | |
'fr_FR'. Or you can just leave it out and let your reader take a | |
guess. | |
Unless otherwise specified, an element containing CDATA must have some | |
text if it is written. | |
An example XML file for this DTD might look like this: | |
<tv generator-info-name="my listings generator"> | |
<channel id="3sat.de"> | |
<display-name lang="de">3SAT</display-name> | |
</channel> | |
<channel id="das-erste.de"> | |
<display-name lang="de">ARD</display-name> | |
<display-name lang="de">Das Erste</display-name> | |
</channel> | |
<programme start="200006031633" channel="3sat.de"> | |
<title lang="de">blah</title> | |
<title lang="en">blah</title> | |
<desc lang="de"> | |
Blah Blah Blah. | |
</desc> | |
<credits> | |
<director>blah</director> | |
<actor>a</actor> | |
<actor>b</actor> | |
</credits> | |
<date>19901011</date> | |
<country>ES</country> | |
<episode-num system="xmltv_ns">2 . 9 . 0/1</episode-num> | |
<video> | |
<aspect>16:9</aspect> | |
</video> | |
<rating system="MPAA"> | |
<value>PG</value> | |
<icon src="pg_symbol.png" /> | |
</rating> | |
<star-rating> | |
<value>3/3</value> | |
</star-rating> | |
</programme> | |
<programme> ... </programme> | |
... | |
</tv> | |
This describes two channels and then a programme broadcast on one of | |
the channels, then some more programmes. Almost everything in the DTD | |
is optional, so you can write files which are much simpler than this | |
example. | |
All dates and times in this DTD follow the same format, loosely based | |
on ISO 8601. They can be 'YYYYMMDDhhmmss' or some initial | |
substring, for example if you only know the year and month you can | |
have 'YYYYMM'. You can also append a timezone to the end; if no | |
explicit timezone is given, UTC is assumed. Examples: | |
'200007281733 BST', '200209', '19880523083000 +0300'. (BST == +0100.) | |
Unless specified otherwise, textual element content may not contain | |
newlines - this is to make it easy to convert into line-oriented | |
formats, and to avoid the question of what exactly a newline would | |
mean in the middle of someone's name or whatever. Leading and | |
trailing whitespace in element content is not significant. | |
At present versions of this DTD correspond to releases of the 'xmltv' | |
package, which is a set of programs to generate and manipulate files | |
conforming to this DTD. Written by Ed Avis ([email protected]) and | |
Gottfried Szing, thanks to others for suggestions. | |
$Id: xmltv.dtd,v 1.38 2007/11/02 20:03:47 rmeden Exp $ | |
--> | |
<!-- The root element, tv. | |
Date should be the date when the listings were originally produced in | |
whatever format; if you're converting data from another source, then | |
use the date given by that source. The date when the conversion | |
itself was done is not important. | |
To indicate the source of the listings, there are three attributes you | |
can define: | |
'source-info-url' is a URL describing the data source in | |
some human-readable form. So if you are getting your listings from | |
SAT.1, you might set this to the URL of a page explaining how to | |
subscribe to their feed. If you are getting them from a website, the | |
URL might be the index of the site or at least of the TV listings | |
section. | |
'source-info-name' is the link text for that URL; it should | |
generally be the human-readable name of your listings supplier. | |
Sometimes the link text might be printed without the link itself, in | |
hardcopy listings for example. | |
'source-data-url' is where the actual data is grabbed from. This | |
should link directly to the machine-readable data files if possible, | |
but it's not rigorously defined what 'actual data' means. If you are | |
parsing the data from human-readable pages, then it's more appropriate | |
to link to them with the source-info stuff and omit this attribute. | |
To publicize your wonderful program which generated this file, you can | |
use 'generator-info-name' (preferably in the form 'progname/version') | |
and 'generator-info-url' (a link to more info about the program). | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT tv (channel*, programme*)> | |
<!ATTLIST tv date CDATA #IMPLIED | |
source-info-url CDATA #IMPLIED | |
source-info-name CDATA #IMPLIED | |
source-data-url CDATA #IMPLIED | |
generator-info-name CDATA #IMPLIED | |
generator-info-url CDATA #IMPLIED > | |
<!-- channel - details of a channel | |
Each 'programme' element (see below) should have an attribute | |
'channel' giving the channel on which it is broadcast. If you want to | |
provide more detail about channels, you can give some 'channel' | |
elements before listing the programmes. The 'id' attribute of the | |
channel should match what is given in the 'channel' attribute of the | |
programme. | |
Typically, all the channels used in a particular TV listing will be | |
included and then the programmes using those channels. But it's | |
entirely optional to include channel details - you can just leave out | |
channel elements or provide only some of them. It is also okay to | |
give just channels and no programmes, if you just want to describe | |
what TV channels are available in a certain area. | |
Each channel has one id attribute, which must be unique and should | |
preferably be in the form suggested by RFC2838 (the 'broadcast' | |
element of the grammar in that RFC, in other words, a DNS-like name | |
but without any URI scheme). Then one or more display names which are | |
shown to the user. You might want a different display name for | |
different languages, but also you can have more than one name for the | |
same language. Names listed earlier are considered 'more canonical'. | |
Since the display name is just there as a way for humans to refer to | |
the channel, it's acceptable to just put the channel number if it's | |
fairly universal among viewers of the channel. But remember that this | |
isn't an official statement of what channel number has been | |
allocated, and the same number might be used for a different channel | |
somewhere else. | |
The ordering of channel elements makes no difference to the meaning of | |
the file, since they are looked up by id and not by their position. | |
However it makes things like diffing easier if you write the channel | |
elements sorted by ASCII order of their ids. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT channel (display-name+, icon*, url*) > | |
<!ATTLIST channel id CDATA #REQUIRED > | |
<!-- A user-friendly name for the channel - maybe even a channel | |
number. List the most canonical / common ones first and the most | |
obscure names last. The lang attribute follows RFC 1766. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT display-name (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST display-name lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- A URL where you can find out more about the element that contains | |
it (programme or channel). This might be the official site, or a fan | |
page, whatever you like really. | |
If multiple url elements are given, the most authoritative or official | |
(which might conflict...) sites should be listed first. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT url (#PCDATA)> | |
<!-- programme - details of a single programme transmission | |
A show will be exactly the same whether it is broadcast at 18:00 or | |
19:00, and on whichever channel. Technical details like broadcast | |
time don't affect the content of the programme itself, so they are | |
included as attributes of this element. Start time and channel are | |
the two that you must include. | |
Sometimes VCR programming systems like PDC or VPS have their own | |
notion of 'start time' which is different from the actual start time, | |
so there are attributes for that. In practice, stop time will usually | |
be the start time of the next programme, but if you can get it more | |
accurate, good for you. Similarly, you can specify a code for | |
Gemstar's Showview or VideoPlus programming systems. | |
TV listings sometimes have the problem of listing two or more | |
programmes in the same timeslot, such as 'News; Weather'. We call | |
this a 'clump' of programmes, and the 'clumpidx' attribute | |
differentiates between two programmes sharing the same timeslot and | |
channel. In this case News would have clumpidx="0/2" and Weather | |
would have clumpidx="1/2". If you don't have this problem, be | |
thankful! | |
It's intended that start time and stop time, when both are present, | |
make a half-closed interval: a programme is considered to be | |
broadcasting _at_ its start time but to stop just before its stop | |
time. In this way a programme from 11:00 to 12:00 does not overlap | |
with another programme from 12:00 to 13:00, not even for a moment. | |
Nor is there any gap between the two. | |
To do: Some means of indicating breaks between programmes on the same | |
channel. The 'channel' attribute references the 'id' of a channel | |
element, but the DTD doesn't give a way to specify this constraint. | |
Perhaps there is some better XML syntax we could use for that. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT programme (title+, sub-title*, desc*, credits?, date?, | |
category*, language?, orig-language?, length?, | |
icon*, url*, country*, episode-num*, video?, audio?, | |
previously-shown?, premiere?, last-chance?, new?, | |
subtitles*, rating*, star-rating* )> | |
<!ATTLIST programme start CDATA #REQUIRED | |
stop CDATA #IMPLIED | |
pdc-start CDATA #IMPLIED | |
vps-start CDATA #IMPLIED | |
showview CDATA #IMPLIED | |
videoplus CDATA #IMPLIED | |
channel CDATA #REQUIRED | |
clumpidx CDATA "0/1" > | |
<!-- Programme title, eg 'The Simpsons'. --> | |
<!ELEMENT title (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST title lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- Sub-title or episode title, eg 'Datalore'. Should probably be | |
called 'secondary title' to avoid confusion with captioning! | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT sub-title (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST sub-title lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- Description of the programme or episode. | |
Unlike other elements, long bits of whitespace here are treated as | |
equivalent to a single space and newlines are permitted, so you can | |
break lines and write a pretty-looking paragraph if you wish. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT desc (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST desc lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- Credits for the programme. | |
People are listed in decreasing order of importance; so for example | |
the starring actors appear first followed by the smaller parts. As | |
with other parts of this file format, not mentioning a particular | |
actor (for example) does not imply that he _didn't_ star in the film - | |
so normally you'd list only the few most important people. | |
Adapter can be either somebody who adapted a work for television, or | |
somebody who did the translation from another language. Maybe these | |
should be separate, but if so how would 'translator' fit in with the | |
'language' element? | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT credits (director*, actor*, writer*, adapter*, producer*, | |
presenter*, commentator*, guest* )> | |
<!ELEMENT director (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT actor (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT writer (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT adapter (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT producer (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT presenter (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT commentator (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT guest (#PCDATA)> | |
<!-- The date the programme or film was finished. This will probably | |
be the same as the copyright date. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT date (#PCDATA)> | |
<!-- Type of programme, eg 'soap', 'comedy' or whatever the | |
equivalents are in your language. There's no predefined set of | |
categories and it's okay for a programme to belong to several. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT category (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST category lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- The language the programme will be broadcast in. This does not | |
include the language of any subtitles, but it is affected by dubbing | |
into a different language. For example, if a French film is dubbed | |
into English, language=en and orig-language=fr. | |
There are two ways to specify the language. You can use the | |
two-letter codes such as en or fr, or you can give a name such as | |
'English' or 'Deutsch'. In the latter case you might want to use the | |
'lang' attribute, for example | |
<language lang="fr">Allemand</language> | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT language (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST language lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- The original language, before dubbing. The same remarks as for | |
'language' apply. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT orig-language (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST orig-language lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- The true length of the programme, not counting advertisements or | |
trailers. But this does take account of any bits which were cut out | |
of the broadcast version - eg if a two hour film is cut to 110 minutes | |
and then padded with 20 minutes of advertising, length will be 110 | |
minutes even though end time minus start time is 130 minutes. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT length (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST length units (seconds | minutes | hours) #REQUIRED> | |
<!-- An icon associated with the element that contains it. | |
src: uri of image | |
width, height: (optional) dimensions of image | |
These dimensions are pixel dimensions for the time being, eventually | |
this will change to be more like HTML's 'img'. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT icon EMPTY> | |
<!ATTLIST icon src CDATA #REQUIRED | |
width CDATA #IMPLIED | |
height CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- The value of the element that contains it. This is for elements | |
that can have both a textual 'value' and an icon. At present there is | |
no 'lang' attribute here because things like 'PG' are not translatable | |
(although a document explaining what 'PG' actually means would be). | |
It happens that 'value' is used only for this sort of thing. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT value (#PCDATA)> | |
<!-- A country where the programme was made or one of the countries in | |
a joint production. You can give the name of a country, in which case | |
you might want to specify the language in which this name is written, | |
or you can give a two-letter uppercase country code, in which case the | |
lang attribute should not be given. For example, | |
<country lang="en">Italy</country> | |
<country>GB</country> | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT country (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST country lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- Episode number | |
Not the title of the episode, its number or ID. There are several | |
ways of numbering episodes, so the 'system' attribute lets you specify | |
which you mean. | |
There are two predefined numbering systems, 'xmltv_ns' and | |
'onscreen'. | |
xmltv_ns: This is intended to be a general way to number episodes and | |
parts of multi-part episodes. It is three numbers separated by dots, | |
the first is the series or season, the second the episode number | |
within that series, and the third the part number, if the programme is | |
part of a two-parter. All these numbers are indexed from zero, and | |
they can be given in the form 'X/Y' to show series X out of Y series | |
made, or episode X out of Y episodes in this series, or part X of a | |
Y-part episode. If any of these aren't known they can be omitted. | |
You can put spaces whereever you like to make things easier to read. | |
(NB 'part number' is not used when a whole programme is split in two | |
for purely scheduling reasons; it's intended for cases where there | |
really is a 'Part One' and 'Part Two'. The format doesn't currently | |
have a way to represent a whole programme that happens to be split | |
across two or more timeslots.) | |
Some examples will make things clearer. The first episode of the | |
second series is '1.0.0/1' . If it were a two-part episode, then the | |
first half would be '1.0.0/2' and the second half '1.0.1/2'. If you | |
know that an episode is from the first season, but you don't know | |
which episode it is or whether it is part of a multiparter, you could | |
give the episode-num as '0..'. Here the second and third numbers have | |
been omitted. If you know that this is the first part of a three-part | |
episode, which is the last episode of the first series of thirteen, | |
its number would be '0 . 12/13 . 0/3'. The series number is just '0' | |
because you don't know how many series there are in total - perhaps | |
the show is still being made! | |
The other predefined system, onscreen, is to simply copy what the | |
programme makers write in the credits - 'Episode #FFEE' would | |
translate to '#FFEE'. | |
You are encouraged to use one of these two if possible; if xmltv_ns is | |
not general enough for your needs, let me know. But if you want, you | |
can use your own system and give the 'system' attribute as a URL | |
describing the system you use. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT episode-num (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST episode-num system CDATA "onscreen"> | |
<!-- Video details: the subelements describe the picture quality as | |
follows: | |
present: whether this programme has a picture (no, in the | |
case of radio stations broadcast on TV or 'Blue'), legal values are | |
'yes' or 'no'. Obviously if the value is 'no', the other elements are | |
meaningless. | |
colour: 'yes' for colour, 'no' for black-and-white. | |
aspect: The horizontal:vertical aspect ratio, eg '4:3' or '16:9'. | |
quality: information on the quality, eg 'HDTV', '800x600'. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT video (present?, colour?, aspect?, quality?)> | |
<!ELEMENT present (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT colour (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT aspect (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ELEMENT quality (#PCDATA)> | |
<!-- Audio details, similar to video details above. | |
present: whether this programme has any sound at all, 'yes' or 'no'. | |
stereo: Description of the stereo-ness of the sound. Legal values | |
are currently 'mono','stereo','dolby','dolby digital' and 'surround'; | |
others like 'quad' might be added later. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT audio (present?, stereo?)> | |
<!ELEMENT stereo (#PCDATA)> | |
<!-- When and where the programme was last shown, if known. Normally | |
in TV listings 'repeat' means 'previously shown on this channel', but | |
if you don't know what channel the old screening was on (but do know | |
that it happened) then you can omit the 'channel' attribute. | |
Similarly you can omit the 'start' attribute if you don't know when | |
the previous transmission was (though you can of course give just the | |
year, etc.). | |
The absence of this element does not say for certain that the | |
programme is brand new and has never been screened anywhere before. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT previously-shown EMPTY> | |
<!ATTLIST previously-shown start CDATA #IMPLIED | |
channel CDATA #IMPLIED > | |
<!-- 'Premiere'. Different channels have different meanings for this | |
word - sometimes it means a film has never before been seen on TV in | |
that country, but other channels use it to mean 'the first showing of | |
this film on our channel in the current run'. It might have been | |
shown before, but now they have paid for another set of showings, | |
which makes the first in that set count as a premiere! | |
So this element doesn't have a clear meaning, just use it to represent | |
where 'premiere' would appear in a printed TV listing. You can use | |
the content of the element to explain exactly what is meant, for | |
example: | |
<premiere lang="en"> | |
First showing on national terrestrial TV | |
</premiere> | |
The textual content is a 'paragraph' as for <desc>. If you don't want | |
to give an explanation, just write empty content: | |
<premiere /> | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT premiere (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST premiere lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- Last-chance. In a way this is the opposite of premiere. Some | |
channels buy the rights to show a movie a certain number of times, and | |
the first may be flagged 'premiere', the last as 'last showing'. | |
For symmetry with premiere, you may use the element content to give a | |
'paragraph' describing exactly what is meant - it's unlikely to be the | |
last showing ever! Otherwise, explicitly put empty content: | |
<last-chance /> | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT last-chance (#PCDATA)> | |
<!ATTLIST last-chance lang CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- New. This is the first screened programme from a new show that | |
has never been shown on television before - if not worldwide then at | |
least never before in this country. After the first episode or | |
programme has been shown, subsequent ones are no longer 'new'. | |
Similarly the second series of an established programme is not 'new'. | |
Note that this does not mean 'new season' or 'new episode' of an | |
existing show. You can express part of that using the episode-num | |
stuff. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT new EMPTY> | |
<!-- Subtitles. These can be either 'teletext' (sent digitally, and | |
displayed at the viewer's request), 'onscreen' (superimposed on the | |
picture and impossible to get rid of), or 'deaf-signed' (in-vision | |
signing for users of sign language). You can have multiple subtitle | |
streams to handle different languages. Language for subtitles is | |
specified in the same way as for programmes. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT subtitles (language?)> | |
<!ATTLIST subtitles type (teletext | onscreen | deaf-signed) #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- Rating. Various bodies decide on classifications for films - | |
usually a minimum age you must be to see it. In principle the same | |
could be done for ordinary TV programmes. Because there are many | |
systems for doing this, you can also specify the rating system used | |
(which in practice is the same as the body which made the rating). | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT rating (value, icon*)> | |
<!ATTLIST rating system CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- 'Star rating' - many listings guides award a programme a score as | |
a quick guide to how good it is. The value of this element should be | |
'N / M', for example one star out of a possible five stars would be | |
'1 / 5'. Zero stars is also a possible score (and not the same as | |
'unrated'). You should try to map whatever wacky system your listings | |
source uses to a number of stars: so for example if they have thumbs | |
up, thumbs sideways and thumbs down, you could map that to two, one or | |
zero stars out of two. If a programme is marked as recommended in a | |
listings guide you could map this to '1 / 1'. Because there could be many | |
ways to provide star-ratings or recommendations for a programme, you can | |
specify multiple star-ratings. You can specify the star-rating system | |
used, or the provider of the recommendation, with the system attribute. | |
Whitespace between the numbers and slash is ignored. | |
--> | |
<!ELEMENT star-rating (value, icon*)> | |
<!ATTLIST star-rating system CDATA #IMPLIED> | |
<!-- (Why are things like 'stereo', which must be one of a small | |
number of values, stored as the contents of elements rather than as | |
attributes? Because they are data rather than metadata. Attributes | |
are used for things like the language or encoding of element contents, | |
or for programme transmission details.) --> | |
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