Leif Halvard Silli On 09-05-22 00.34:
The Dublin Core example in the "Extending Metadata in XHTML" section
of the "RDFa Tutorial" uses an old profile:
http://dublincore.org/documents/dcq-html/
It would probably be a good idea to replace it with the profile that
The Dublin Core example in the "Extending Metadata in XHTML" section of
the "RDFa Tutorial" uses an old profile:
http://dublincore.org/documents/dcq-html/
It would probably be a good idea to replace it with the profile that
since 2008-08-04 has replaced it:
h
On Wed, 20 May 2009 17:35:58 +0200, Toby Inkster wrote:
On Wed, 2009-05-20 at 14:56 +0200, Steven Pemberton wrote:
24th April
maybe if I add a time, so that it at least mentions the right date.
IIRC ISO 8601 has an interesting construction "T24:00" which represents
the very last instant of
On Wed, 2009-05-20 at 14:56 +0200, Steven Pemberton wrote:
> 24th April
>
> maybe if I add a time, so that it at least mentions the right date.
IIRC ISO 8601 has an interesting construction "T24:00" which represents
the very last instant of a particular day. So you could do:
24th April
xsd:dat
Thanks a lot for these comments.
On Fri, 15 May 2009 14:01:02 +0200, KANZAKI Masahide
wrote:
Hi, thanks for preparing good starter document. I noticed some people
in twitter already talking about this tutorial as "the first read",
after the Google announcement.
A few minor comments on voca
Hi, thanks for preparing good starter document. I noticed some people
in twitter already talking about this tutorial as "the first read",
after the Google announcement.
A few minor comments on vocabulary examples:
- foaf:img has foaf:Person as its domain and foaf:Image as its range.
Hence the rel
Thanks for this Toby. All good suggestions, most of which have now been
applied.
What would you recommend as the best reference for iCal in RDF?
Best wishes,
Steven
On Wed, 13 May 2009 10:42:27 +0200, Toby Inkster wrote:
On Wed, 2009-05-13 at 00:13 +0200, Steven Pemberton wrote:
http:/
On Wed, 2009-05-13 at 00:13 +0200, Steven Pemberton wrote:
> http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/2009/rdfa-for-html-authors
Looks like a good start. A few comments:
| Essentially all knowledge is gathered as assertions of the form:
|
| URI property value
Would be nice to have a bit of punctuation in th
Hi gang,
The Google news inspired me to drum up an RDFa tutorial. It is nearly
complete at:
http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/2009/rdfa-for-html-authors
and I would be happy to have any comments you might have.
It doesn't (yet) mention use of @src, nor of chaining, but I need to go to