Hi guys,

Have you looked at "Best Practice Recipes for Publishing RDF Vocabularies":

http://www.w3.org/2001/sw/BestPractices/VM/http-examples/2006-01-18/

Peter

Juan Sequeda wrote:
Hi Bill,

Is your code to do the content negotation in RoR available somewhere?

I'm trying to come up with example code to put up (sometime soon) on the linkeddata.org <http://linkeddata.org> site.

Juan Sequeda, Ph.D Student
Dept. of Computer Sciences
The University of Texas at Austin
www.juansequeda.com <http://www.juansequeda.com>
www.semanticwebaustin.org <http://www.semanticwebaustin.org>


On Thu, Jul 2, 2009 at 8:19 PM, Bill Roberts <b...@swirrl.com <mailto:b...@swirrl.com>> wrote:

    I thought I'd give the .htaccess approach a try, to see what's
    involved in actually setting it up.  I'm no expert on Apache, but
    I know the basics of how it works, I've got full access to a web
    server and I can read the online Apache documentation as well as
    the next person.

    So... after an hour or so of messing around, I still couldn't get
    Apache based linked data content negotiation to work properly.
     (Something to do with turning off MultiViews which in turn meant
    fiddling with AllowOverride).  I had more pressing things to do so
    I gave up.

    Anyway, I conclude that I agree with Martin that this is not in
    general an easy way to set up content negotiation!  And I had full
    access to all the Apache conf files - without that I wouldn't have
    got anywhere.  In contrast, last year I wrote some code to do
    linked data content negotiation in a Ruby on Rails app, which was
    pretty easy.

    Regards

    Bill








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