The internal reference citation ______ doesn't match the ID of the target provision (______), stored in the href attribute of the reference element). This may mean the citation has not updated correctly or that it has been manually changed. Recreate the reference unless you are sure the current text and attributes are correct.
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For example, if you have created several cross-references to ‘section 4' throughout your document, and section 4 is subsequently moved elsewhere in the document and renumbered as section 8, you can use the ‘Update x-refs’ action will function to automatically correct the reference text of your cross-references so that they instead read 'section 8’.
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assuming the text of the reference is correct, and refers to the intended provision, simply select the text and click the ‘Tag x-refs’ button in the toolbar. This will re-create the cross-reference tag with the correct underlying information about its target.
if you prefer to manually re-create the reference, right-click on the relevant target provision in the Structure View, hover over ‘select reference to copy’ in the menu, click on the desired reference form, then highlight the old reference text in your document and press Ctrl+V to paste the newly created reference in its place.
The target of internal legislative document relating to the external reference _______ _____ cannot be found in this document. It may be in another document or have been deleted. (Target ID: _________) could not be located on http://www.legislation.gov.uk . This may be because the document doesn't exist yet or because there is a typo in the name.
This warning alerts you to any external references which could not be associated with a relevant document on legislation.gov.uk during the automatic Tag x-refs process. The error message will only ever apply to external references.
When using the automatic tagging feature, Lawmaker will parse the text of any references which appear in the text of your document and attempt to add links to relevant provisions of documents published on legislation.gov.uk. For this automatic tagging process to work, the reference text in your document must match exactly the title of the referenced documents as they appear on legislation.gov.uk.
For example, a reference to the “Human Rights Act 1999” will be flagged as an erroneous reference because the year is wrong; likewise a reference to the “Human Rights act 1998” will be flagged as an erroneous reference because the word ‘act’ is not capitalised. A reference to the “Human Rights Act 1998” will be tagged successfully.
You will also see this warning appear on external references which refer to documents which will be published in future but which do not currently exist on leigslation.gov.uk. In those cases, you do not need to take any action. If you would like to remove the document check warning for any of these references, you can right-click on the reference (or double-click on it and use the floating toolbar), and select Ignore reference.
Where the flagged reference is to a document which does exist, and you expect the automatic tagging to correctly add an appropriate link, first check the spelling, capitalisation, and year in the text of the reference, and ensure it matches that of the relevant document on legislation.gov.uk. (Note that the presence, absence, or capitalisation of the word ‘the’ at the start of the reference does not affect the parsing.) If you notice a mismatch between your document reference and the title on legislation.gov.uk and wish to correct it and re-tag, perform the following steps: right-click on the reference (or use the floating toolbar) and select Remove reference, then make your correction to the text of the reference, and finally click the Tag x-refs button (or alt+T on your keyboard) to re-tag the provision.
Reference ________ requires checking as it has been updated.
This warning may appear when re-tagging a document - that is, re-running the automatic Tag x-refs function again on a document which already contains references. The warning will appear if you have made changes to the text of your document in a way which causes the meaning of certain references to change. The warning alerts you to references which originally referred to a particular provision of a document, but which now (after re-tagging) refer to a different document, usually because something else has changed nearby which affects the context in which that reference appears.
For example, a provision of a Bill which makes amendments to enacted legislation will often introduce those amendments by stating that “the [Act name] is amended as follows”. The other subsections or paragraphs which follow will contain references to the provisions in that Act without explicitly stating after each reference that it is a reference to the same Act. Automatically tagging such a provision in Lawmaker will correctly identify that the references in the other subsections/paragraphs are to provisions in the Act introduced in the introductory text. If you then change the text which introduces the Act so that it instead refers to a different Act, and re-tag the provision, the references in the other subsections will be flagged for checking. The screenshots below show an example of this:
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The purpose of this document check is to alert you that the automatically tagged references have changed and ought to be checked.
To check them, you can double-click on each one to bring up the floating toolbar, then click Go to ref to go to the target of the reference.
If the reference still appears correct to you, double-click on it to bring up the floating toolbar, select Edit ref, and in the modal scroll down and change the Status from ‘Check' to ‘Valid’. The click Save to save the changed status.
If the reference target appears incorrect, it is advisable to re-read the provision in which the reference appears and consider why the target of the reference has changed. there may be a reason why the target has changed. If you still aren’t sure why the target is incorrect, you may then choose to re-create the reference manually, for example if it is an internal reference which has been incorrectly tagged as an external reference. Alternatively, you can right-click on the reference and choose ‘Ignore reference’ to remove the link and also exclude the reference from further consideration by any re-tagging operations.
Multiple reference tags (mref) should surround two or more references. The tags should be removed if they contain only one or no references.
The target of internal reference ____________ cannot be found in this document. It may be in another document or have been deleted. (Target ID: _________)
A range reference element (rref) should contain two references. The element can be removed if it contains only one or no references.
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