| Authors: |
Ben Adida
and Mark Birbeck
|
| URL: |
http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/WD-xhtml-rdfa-primer-20071026/ |
| Tags: |
rdfa
|
| Abstract: |
Current Web pages, written in XHTML, contain inherent structured data: calendar events, contact information, photo captions, song titles, copyright licensing information, etc. When authors and publishers can express this data precisely, and when tools can read it robustly, a new world of user functionality becomes available, letting users transfer structured data between applications and Web sites. An event on a Web page can be directly imported into a desktop calendar. A license on a document can be detected to inform the user of his rights automatically. A photo's creator, camera setting information, resolution, and topic can be published as easily as the original photo itself. |
@techreport{RDFA2007WD,
title = {RDFa Primer 1.0 Embedding RDF in XHTML},
author = {Ben Adida and Mark Birbeck},
day = {26},
institution = {W3C},
month = {October},
type = {W3C Working Draft},
url = {http://www.w3.org/TR/2007/WD-xhtml-rdfa-primer-20071026/},
year = {2007},
abstract = {Current Web pages, written in XHTML, contain inherent structured data: calendar events, contact information, photo captions, song titles, copyright licensing information, etc. When authors and publishers can express this data precisely, and when tools can read it robustly, a new world of user functionality becomes available, letting users transfer structured data between applications and Web sites. An event on a Web page can be directly imported into a desktop calendar. A license on a document can be detected to inform the user of his rights automatically. A photo's creator, camera setting information, resolution, and topic can be published as easily as the original photo itself.},
keywords = {rdfa }
}