BBC
Denmark is voting in an early general election with a close result expected.
Opinion polls are suggesting a slim victory for Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen's centre-right coalition over the centre-left opposition.
There has been much campaign wrangling about welfare and tax reforms, immigration and the environment.
But all the main parties seem to agree on the core issues and campaigning has been more about who wields power than a policy change, correspondents say.
Narrowing the gap
Polls were due to open across Denmark at 0800 GMT and to close at 1900 GMT, with final results expected just before midnight.
This election is very close. You can't count your chickens before they're hatched
Anders Fogh Rasmussen
Danish Prime Minister
Some four million Danes are eligible to elect the 179-member parliament, the Folketing.
Mr Rasmussen's minority Liberal-Conservative government - along with its parliamentary ally the right-wing Danish People's Party - has led opinion polls, but the Social Democrat-led opposition has narrowed the gap in the last few days.
"This election is very close. You can't count your chickens before they're hatched," Mr Rasmussen said in a final TV debate on Monday.
Mr Rasmussen called the vote because election rumours have been so widespread over the past couple of months that parliament had almost come to a standstill, the BBC's Julian Isherwood in Copenhagen says.
The prime minister - who faces upcoming wage negotiations and a package of welfare reforms to negotiate - said he needed a renewed mandate to continue.
Crusade
The main problem for Mr Rasmussen's government appears to have been the emergence of the New Alliance party, observers say.
Naser Khader
Syrian-born Naser Khader has shot to prominence in Denmark
Under the leadership of a Syria-born Palestinian, Naser Khader, the party has been doing well in the opinion polls.
New Alliance wants to stem the influence on the government of the Danish People's Party, who stand on an anti-immigration platform.
The latest opinion polls have predicted that even though support for New Alliance has waned, it will still be the deciding factor in who becomes the next prime minister.
And although Mr Khader has said his choice would be the current prime minister, many expect negotiations along the way.
Nine parties are contesting the election, and several of them hover around the 2% electoral threshold.
However, even a change in government to the main opposition Social Democrats would be unlikely to change Denmark's domestic or international politics to any major degree, our correspondent says.
BBC
Immigration has become the central battleground in the Danish parliamentary election, which takes place on Tuesday.
Poster of Danish PM Anders Fogh Rasmussen
Mr Fogh Rasmussen is tipped to win the election - and a third term
Denmark's relations with the Muslim world reached crisis point in 2005 over a Danish newspaper's publication of Prophet Muhammad cartoons.
The leader of the opposition Social Democrats, Helle Thorning-Schmidt, proposes to relax restrictions on asylum seekers.
The centre-right Prime Minister, Anders Fogh Rasmussen, warns that such a move could turn Denmark into "a magnet for refugees".
Strict immigration policies have been at the heart of his government's programme since 2001.
Mrs Thorning-Schmidt, daughter-in-law of former British Labour Party leader Neil Kinnock, wants to give a group of some 500 Iraqi failed asylum seekers permission to live and work outside their refugee camps until Iraq becomes safe enough for them to return. She says Denmark has a special responsibility to help the Iraqis because of Denmark's role in the Iraq conflict.
Although most Danes want to ease restrictions on asylum seekers, Mrs Thorning-Schmidt still looks unlikely to win.
Her party, like Mr Fogh Rasmussen's, would need the support of the centre-right New Alliance Party to form a government - but it is thought to be leaning towards the incumbent prime minister.
Cartoon row
New Alliance was founded in May this year by a popular immigrant politician, Syrian-born Naser Khader.
Naser Khader
Syrian-born Naser Khader has shot to prominence in Denmark
He came to prominence in 2005 when he promoted reconciliation and religious tolerance to defuse the row over the Prophet Muhammad cartoons. Anti-cartoon protests across the Muslim world left more than 100 dead.
Mr Khader, who has "democracy" tattooed across his right arm, remains a cultural Muslim.
His party wants to reform Denmark's tax system. The country has one of the highest tax rates in the world - up to 68% - and New Alliance is keen to reduce it. The party also wants better conditions for asylum seekers.
Rival Muslim candidate
Mr Khader contrasts with the other prominent Muslim politician in the race, Asmaa Abdol-Hamid of the left-wing Unity List.
Mrs Abdol-Hamid - who wears a headscarf - has upset many by refusing to shake hands with men in public for religious reasons.
There is absolutely no way we will bow to a terror organisation
Pia Kjaersgaard, DPP leader
At the other end of the political spectrum is the anti-immigration Danish People's Party (DPP). The DPP has been the driving force behind the tightening of Denmark's immigration laws in recent years.
It has angered the Palestinian Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade in Gaza by using an image of the Prophet Muhammad on one of its election posters, in direct reference to the cartoon row.
The image was accompanied by the text "Freedom of speech is Danish, censorship is not".
No TV debate
In an interview with Jyllandsposten, the newspaper that originally published the cartoons, a spokesman for the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, Khaled al-Jabbari, said "this party is dealing with the blood of the Danish people. That is dangerous."
Helle Thorning-Schmidt
Mrs Thorning-Schmidt wants more welfare instead of tax cuts
"The DPP will not only be an enemy of the Al-Aqsa Brigade. They will be an enemy of many Muslims," he added.
DPP leader Pia Kjaersgaard said "this is insane - there is absolutely no way we will bow to a terror organisation".
"We did not draw the image. It is a 400-year-old drawing of Muhammad that we are using to symbolise freedom of speech."
Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller said "Al-Aqsa Brigade is a terror organisation that should not dictate the political life of Denmark".
Although he is the favourite to win the election, Mr Fogh Rasmussen has refused to hold a live TV debate with Mrs Thorning-Schmidt.
He says such debates are too populist and distract from real politics.
Some commentators suggest that his real concern is that Mrs Thorning-Schmidt, the first female prime ministerial candidate in Denmark, has a better connection with the audience.
Whoever wins, immigration will remain high up Denmark's political agenda.
Thought it would be interesting reading.
"it takes two sides to end a war but only one to start one. And those who do not have swords may still die upon them." Tolken