<Groups>
Description
Within the <Groups> start tag
and the </Groups> end tag, specify one or more
Group elements.
A given document element can belong to multiple groups.
This serves as a way to organize document elements.
Each Group element consists of a group path
string enclosed within the <Group>
start tag and the </Group> end tag,
with forward slashes serving as the path-separator character.
Each group path must be a full group path and thus all group
paths must begin with a forward slash.
If a group name has a slash as part of its name, then it
must be represented in the path with two forward slashes
so that it does not get interpreted as a path-separator
character.
Examples
This example specifies that the entry belongs to the groups
whose paths are /Personal/Memoirs and
/Business. Note that both group paths begin with a
forward slash as required.
<Groups>
<Group>/Personal/Memoirs</Group>
<Group>/Business</Group>
</Groups>
The next example specifies that the entry belongs to the top-level
group named Evening/Night. Note that the group
path string uses two forward slashes between the two words
to indicate that the character between the two words is a forward
slash that is part of the group name and thus that the two words
with the forward slash between them form a single group name
instead of two separate levels in the group path.
<Groups>
<Group>/Evening//Night</Group>
</Groups>
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