RDFa Core 1.1: Syntax and Processing Rules for Embedding RDF through Attributes

Ben Adida, Mark Birbeck, Shane McCarron, Ivan Herman

Citation
Ben Adida, Mark Birbeck, Shane McCarron, Ivan Herman, RDFa Core 1.1: Syntax and Processing Rules for Embedding RDF through Attributes, World Wide Web Consortium, Working Draft WD-rdfa-core-20110331, March 2011.
Descriptions
Abstract:

The current Web is primarily made up of an enormous number of documents that have been created using HTML. These documents contain significant amounts of structured data, which is largely unavailable to tools and applications. When publishers can express this data more completely, and when tools can read it, a new world of user functionality becomes available, letting users transfer structured data between applications and web sites, and allowing browsing applications to improve the user experience: an event on a web page can be directly imported into a user's desktop calendar; a license on a document can be detected so that users can be informed of their rights automatically; a photo's creator, camera setting information, resolution, location and topic can be published as easily as the original photo itself, enabling structured search and sharing. RDFa Core is a specification for attributes to express structured data in any markup language. The embedded data already available in the markup language (e.g., XHTML) can often be reused by the RDFa markup, so that publishers don't need to repeat significant data in the document content. The underlying abstract representation is RDF, which lets publishers build their own vocabulary, extend others, and evolve their vocabulary with maximal interoperability over time. The expressed structure is closely tied to the data, so that rendered data can be copied and pasted along with its relevant structure. The rules for interpreting the data are generic, so that there is no need for different rules for different formats; this allows authors and publishers of data to define their own formats without having to update software, register formats via a central authority, or worry that two formats may interfere with each other. RDFa shares some of the same goals with microformats. Whereas microformats specify both a syntax for embedding structured data into HTML documents and a vocabulary of specific terms for each microformat, RDFa specifies only a syntax and relies on independent specification of terms (often called vocabularies or taxonomies) by others. RDFa allows terms from multiple independently-developed vocabularies to be freely intermixed and is designed such that the language can be parsed without knowledge of the specific vocabulary being used. This document is a detailed syntax specification for RDFa, aimed at: those looking to create an RDFa Processor, and who therefore need a detailed description of the parsing rules; those looking to integrate RDFa into a new markup language; those looking to recommend the use of RDFa within their organization, and who would like to create some guidelines for their users; anyone familiar with RDF, and who wants to understand more about what is happening 'under the hood', when an RDFa Processor runs. For those looking for an introduction to the use of RDFa and some real-world examples, please consult the RDFa Primer.

Annotation:

Keywords: RDFa (RDF in Attributes);

Associations
Updates: updates
Resources

Bibliography Navigation: Reference List; Author Index; Title Index; Keyword Index


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