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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) is 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 [ RDF-PRIMER ], 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 [ 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:
For those looking for an introduction to the use of RDFa and some real-world examples, please consult the RDFa Primer .
First, if you are not familiar with either RDFa or RDF, and simply want to add RDFa to your documents, then you may find the RDFa Primer [ RDFA-PRIMER ] to be a better introduction.
If you are already familiar with RDFa, and you want to examine the processing rules — perhaps to create an RDFa Processor — then you'll find the Processing Model section of most interest. It contains an overview of each of the processing steps, followed by more detailed sections, one for each rule.
If you are not familiar with RDFa, but you are familiar with RDF, then you might find reading the Syntax Overview useful, before looking at the Processing Model since it gives a range of examples of markup that use RDFa. Seeing some examples first should make reading the processing rules easier.
If you are not familiar with RDF, then you might want to take a look at the section on RDF Terminology before trying to do too much with RDFa. Although RDFa is designed to be easy to author — and authors don't need to understand RDF to use it — anyone writing applications that consume RDFa will need to understand RDF. There is a lot of material about RDF on the web, and a growing range of tools that support RDFa, this document only contains enough background on RDF to make the goals of RDFa more clear.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.
This is a revision of RDFa Syntax 1.0 [ RDFA-SYNTAX ]. Once development is complete, if accepted by the W3C membership, this document will supersede the previous Recommendation . There are a number of substantive differences between this version and its predecessor, including:
A sample test harness is available. This set of tests is not intended to be exhaustive. Users may find the tests to be useful examples of RDFa usage.
This
document
was
published
by
the
RDFa
Working
Group
as
a
First
Public
Working
Draft.
This
document
is
intended
to
become
a
W3C
Recommendation.
If
you
wish
to
make
comments
regarding
this
document,
please
send
them
to
public-rdfa-wg@w3.org
(
subscribe
,
archives
).
All
feedback
is
welcome.
Publication as a Working Draft does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership. This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.
This document was produced by a group operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy . W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy .
This section is non-normative.
RDF/XML [ RDF-SYNTAX ] provides sufficient flexibility to represent all of the abstract concepts in RDF [ RDF-CONCEPTS ]. However, it presents a number of challenges; first it is difficult or impossible to validate documents that contain RDF/XML using XML Schemas or DTDs, which therefore makes it difficult to import RDF/XML into other markup languages. Whilst newer schema languages such as RELAX NG [ RELAXNG-SCHEMA ] do provide a way to validate documents that contain arbitrary RDF/XML, it will be a while before they gain wide support.
Second, even if one could add RDF/XML directly into an XML dialect like XHTML, there would be significant data duplication between the rendered data and the RDF/XML structured data. It would be far better to add RDF to a document without repeating the document's existing data. For example, an XHTML document that explicitly renders its author's name in the text—perhaps as a byline on a news site—should not need to repeat this name for the RDF expression of the same concept: it should be possible to supplement the existing markup in such a way that it can also be interpreted as RDF.
Another reason for aligning the rendered data with the structured data is that it is highly beneficial to express the web data's structure 'in context'; as users often want to transfer structured data from one application to another, sometimes to or from a non-web-based application, the user experience can be enhanced. For example, information about specific rendered data could be presented to the user via 'right-clicks' on an item of interest.
In the past, many attributes were 'hard-wired' directly into the markup language to represent specific concepts. For example, in XHTML 1.1 [ XHTML11 ] and HTML [ HTML401 ] there is @cite ; the attribute allows an author to add information to a document which is used to indicate the origin of a quote.
However, these 'hard-wired' attributes make it difficult to define a generic process for extracting metadata from any document since an RDFa Processor would need to know about each of the special attributes. One motivation for RDFa has been to devise a means by which documents can be augmented with metadata in a general, rather than hard-wired, manner. This has been achieved by creating a fixed set of attributes and parsing rules, but allowing those attributes to contain properties from any of a number of the growing range of available RDF vocabularies. In most cases the values of those properties are the information that is already in an author's XHTML document.
RDFa alleviates the pressure on markup language designers to anticipate all the structural requirements users of their language might have, by outlining a new syntax for RDF that relies only on attributes. By adhering to the concepts and rules in this specification, language designers can import RDFa into their environment with a minimum of hassle and be confident that semantic data will be extractable from their documents by conforming processors.
This section is non-normative.
The following examples are intended to help readers who are not familiar with RDFa to quickly get a sense of how it works. For a more thorough introduction, please read the RDFa Primer [ RDFA-PRIMER ].
For brevity, in the following examples and throughout this document, assume that the following vocabulary prefixes have been defined:
bibo: | http://purl.org/ontology/bibo/ |
cc: | http://creativecommons.org/ns# |
dbp: | http://dbpedia.org/property/ |
dbr: | http://dbpedia.org/resource/ |
dc: | http://purl.org/dc/terms/ |
ex: | http://example.org/ |
foaf: | http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/ |
rdf: | http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns# |
rdfa: | http://www.w3.org/ns/rdfa# |
rdfs: | http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema# |
xhv: | http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/vocab# |
xsd: | http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema# |
RDFa makes use of a number of commonly found attributes, as well as providing a few new ones. Attributes that already exist in widely deployed languages (e.g., HTML) have the same meaning they always did, although their syntax has been slightly modified in some cases. For example, in (X)HTML, @rel already defines the relationship between one document and another. However, in (X)HTML there is no clear way to add new values; RDFa sets out to explicitly solve this problem, and does so by allowing URIs as values. It also introduces the idea of 'compact URIs' — referred to as CURIEs in this document — which allow a full URI value to be expressed succinctly. For a complete list of RDFa attribute names and syntax, see Attributes and Syntax .
As
an
(X)HTML
author
you
will
already
be
familiar
with
using
meta
and
link
to
add
additional
information
to
your
documents:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <title>Page 7</title> <meta name="author" content="Mark Birbeck" /> <link rel="prev" href="page6.html" /> <link rel="next" href="page8.html" /> </head> <body>...</body> </html>
RDFa makes use of this concept, enhancing it with the ability to make use of other vocabularies by using compact URIs:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" prefix="foaf: http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/dc: http://purl.org/dc/terms/" > <head> <title>My home-page</title> <meta property="dc:creator" content="Mark Birbeck" /> <link rel="foaf:topic" href="http://www.formsPlayer.com/#us" /> </head> <body>...</body> </html>
RDFa supports the use of @rel and @rev on any element. This is even more useful when with the addition of support for different vocabularies:
This document is licensed under a <a prefix="cc: http://creativecommons.org/ns#" rel="cc:license" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/"> Creative Commons License </a>.
Not only can URLs in the document be re-used to provide metadata, but so can inline text:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" prefix="cal: http://www.w3.org/2002/12/cal/ical#" > <head><title>Jo's Friends and Family Blog</title></head> <body> <p> I'm holding <span property="cal:summary"> one last summer Barbecue </span>, on September 16th at 4pm. </p> </body> </html>
If some displayed text is different to the actual 'value' it represents, more precise values can be added, which can optionally include datatypes:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" prefix="cal: http://www.w3.org/2002/12/cal/ical# xsd: http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" > <head><title>Jo's Friends and Family Blog</title></head> <body> <p> I'm holding <span property="cal:summary"> one last summer Barbecue </span>, on <span property="cal:dtstart" content="2015-09-16T16:00:00-05:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime"> September 16th at 4pm </span>. </p> </body> </html>
In many cases a block of markup will contain a number of properties that relate to the same item; it's possible with RDFa to indicate the type of that item:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" prefix="cal: http://www.w3.org/2002/12/cal/ical# xsd: http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" > <head><title>Jo's Friends and Family Blog</title></head> <body> <p typeof="cal:Vevent"> I'm holding <span property="cal:summary"> one last summer Barbecue </span>, on <span property="cal:dtstart" content="2015-09-16T16:00:00-05:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime"> September 16th at 4pm </span>. </p> </body> </html>
RDFa allows the document to contain metadata information about other documents and resources:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"prefix="biblio: http://example.org/ dc: http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"prefix="bibo: http://purl.org/ontology/bibo/ dc: http://purl.org/dc/terms/" > <head> <title>Books by Marco Pierre White</title> </head> <body> I think White's book'<span'<span about="urn:ISBN:0091808189" typeof="bibo:Book" property="dc:title"> Canteen Cuisine </span>' is well worth getting since although it's quite advanced stuff, he makes it pretty easy to follow. You might also like<span<span about="urn:ISBN:1596913614" typeof="bibo:Book" property="dc:description"> White's autobiography </span>. </body> </html>
When dealing with small amounts of markup, it is sometimes easier to use full URIs, rather than CURIEs. The previous example can also be written as follows:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <title>Books by Marco Pierre White</title> </head> <body> I think White's book '<span about="urn:ISBN:0091808189"typeof="http://purl.org/ontology/bibo/Book" property="http://purl.org/dc/terms/title" >Canteen Cuisine</span>' is well worth getting since although it's quite advanced stuff, he makes it pretty easy to follow. You might also like <span about="urn:ISBN:1596913614"typeof="http://purl.org/ontology/bibo/Book" property="http://purl.org/dc/terms/description" >White's autobiography</span>. </body> </html>
A simple way of defining a portion of a document to use FOAF terms is to use @vocab to define a default vocabulary URI:
<div vocab="http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/" about="#me"> My name is <span property="name">John Doe</span> and my blog is called <a rel="homepage" href="http://example.org/blog/">Understanding Semantics</a>. </div>
the following triples will be generated:
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> . <#me> foaf:name "John Doe" ; foaf:homepage <http://example.org/blog/> .
RDFa
also
permits
external
definition
of
collections
of
prefixes.
The
following
RDFa
Profile
document,
residing
at
http://www.example.org/vocab-rdf-dc.html
defines
the
standard
RDF
prefixes
as
well
as
the
Dublin
Core
vocabulary
prefix
in
RDFa.
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" prefix="rdfa: http://www.w3.org/ns/rdfa#"> <head> ... </head> <body> <p>This is an example to defining the standard RDF and Dublin Core prefixes </p> <p typeof=""> The "<span property="rdfa:prefix">rdf</span>" prefix can be used for the URI: "<span property="rdfa:uri">http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#</span>".</p> <p typeof=""> The "<span property="rdfa:prefix">rdfs</span>" prefix can be used for the URI: "<span property="rdfa:uri">http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#</span>".</p> <p typeof=""> The "<span property="rdfa:prefix">dc</span>" prefix can be used for the URI:"<span >http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/</span>".</p>"<span property="rdfa:uri">http://purl.org/dc/terms/</span>".</p> </html>
Using @profile , the following RDFa snippet:
<p about="http://www.example.org/doc" profile="http://www.example.org/vocab-rdf-dc"> <span property="dc:title">title of the document</span> <span property="rdfs:comment">and this is a longer comment on the same document</span> </p>
yields the following triples:
@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> . @prefix dc: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/> . <http://www.example.org/doc> dc:title "title of the document" ; rdfs:comment "and this is a longer comment on the same document" .
It
is
also
possible
to
define
terms.
Given
the
following
RDFa
Profile
document
at
http://www.example.org/vocab-foaf-terms.html
:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" prefix="rdfa: http://www.w3.org/ns/rdfa#"> <head> <title>Example RDFa Vocabulary</title> </head> <body> <p> This is an example RDFa vocabulary that makes it easier to use the foaf:name and foaf:homepage terms. </p> <p typeof=""> The "<span property="rdfa:term">name</span>" term can be used for the URI: "<span property="rdfa:uri">http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name</span>".</p> <p typeof=""> The "<span property="rdfa:term">homepage</span>" term can be used for the URI: "<span property="rdfa:uri">http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage</span>".</p> </body> </html>
and the following HTML markup:
<div profile="http://www.example.org/vocab-foaf-terms" about="#me"> My name is <span property="name">John Doe</span> and my blog is called <a rel="homepage" href="http://example.org/blog/">Understanding Semantics</a>. </div>
the following triples will be generated:
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> . <#me> foaf:name "John Doe" ; foaf:homepage <http://example.org/blog/> .
This section is non-normative.
The previous section gave examples of typical markup in order to illustrate the structure of RDFa markup. However, what RDFa represents is RDF. In order to author RDFa you do not need to understand RDF, although it would certainly help. However, if you are building a system that consumes the RDF output of a language that supports RDFa you will almost certainly need to understand RDF. This section introduces the basic concepts and terminology of RDF. For a more thorough explanation of RDF, please refer to the RDF Concepts document [ RDF-CONCEPTS ] and the RDF Syntax Document [ RDF-SYNTAX ].
The structured data that RDFa provides access to is a collection of statements . A statement is a basic unit of information that has been constructed in a specific format to make it easier to process. In turn, by breaking large sets of information down into a collection of statements, even very complex metadata can be processed using simple rules.
To illustrate, suppose we have the following set of facts:
Albert was born on March 14, 1879, in Germany. There is a picture of him at the web address, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg.
This would be quite difficult for a machine to interpret, and it is certainly not in a format that could be passed from one data application to another. However, if we convert the information to a set of statements it begins to be more manageable. The same information could therefore be represented by the following shorter 'statements':
Albert was born on March 14, 1879. Albert was born in Germany. Albert has a picture at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg.
To make this information machine-processable, RDF defines a structure for these statements. A statement is formally called a triple , meaning that it is made up of three components. The first is the subject of the triple, and is what we are making our statements about . In all of these examples the subject is 'Albert'.
The second part of a triple is the property of the subject that we want to define. In the examples here, the properties would be 'was born on', 'was born in', and 'has a picture at'. These are more usually called predicates in RDF.
The final part of a triple is called the object . In the examples here the three objects have the values 'March 14, 1879', 'Germany', and 'http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg'.
Breaking complex information into manageable units helps us be specific about our data, but there is still some ambiguity. For example, which 'Albert' are we talking about? If another system has more facts about 'Albert', how could we know whether they are about the same person, and so add them to the list of things we know about that person? If we wanted to find people born in Germany, how could we know that the predicate 'was born in' has the same purpose as the predicate 'birthplace' that might exist in some other system? RDF solves this problem by replacing our vague terms with URI references .
URIs are most commonly used to identify web pages, but RDF makes use of them as a way to provide unique identifiers for concepts. For example, we could identify the subject of all of our statements (the first part of each triple) by using the DBPedia [ http://dbpedia.org ] URI for Albert Einstein, instead of the ambiguous string 'Albert':
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> has the name Albert Einstein. <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> was born on March 14, 1879. <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> was born in Germany. <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> has a picture at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg.
URI references are also used to uniquely identify the objects in metadata statements (the third part of each triple). The picture of Einstein is already a URI, but we could also use a URI to uniquely identify the country Germany. At the same time we'll indicate that the name and date of birth really are literals (and not URIs), by putting quotes around them:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> has the name "Albert Einstein". <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> was born on "March 14, 1879". <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> was born in <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany>. <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> has a picture at < http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg > .
URI references are also used to ensure that predicates are unambiguous; now we can be sure that 'birthplace', 'place of birth', 'Lieu de naissance' and so on, all mean the same thing:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name> "Albert Einstein". <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> <http://dbpedia.org/property/dateOfBirth> "March 14, 1879". <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> <http://dbpedia.org/property/birthPlace> <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany>. <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/depiction> <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg>.
Although URI resources are always used for subjects and predicates, the object part of a triple can be either a URI or a literal . In the example triples, Einstein's name is represented by a plain literal , which means that it is a basic string with no type or language information:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name> "Albert Einstein" .
Some
literals,
such
as
dates
and
numbers,
have
very
specific
meanings,
so
RDF
provides
a
mechanism
for
indicating
the
type
of
a
literal.
A
typed
literal
is
indicated
by
attaching
a
URI
to
the
end
of
a
plain
literal
,
and
this
URI
indicates
the
literal's
datatype.
This
URI
is
usually
based
on
datatypes
defined
in
the
XML
Schema
Datatypes
specification
[
XMLSCHEMA-2
].
The
following
syntax
would
be
used
to
unambiguously
express
Einstein's
date
of
birth
as
a
literal
of
type
http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#date
:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> <http://dbpedia.org/property/dateOfBirth> "1879-03-14" ^^<http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#date> .
RDF itself does not have one set way to express triples, since the key ideas of RDF are the triple and the use of URIs, and not any particular syntax. However, there are a number of mechanisms for expressing triples, such as RDF/XML [ RDF-SYNTAX-GRAMMAR ], Turtle [ TURTLE ], and of course RDFa. Many discussions of RDF make use of the Turtle syntax to explain their ideas, since it is quite compact. The examples we have just seen are already using this syntax, and we'll continue to use it throughout this document when we need to talk about the RDF that could be generated from some RDFa. Turtle allows long URIs to be abbreviated by using a URI mapping, which can be used to express a compact URI as follows:
@prefix dbp: <http://dbpedia.org/property/> . @prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> foaf:name "Albert Einstein" . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:birthPlace <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> .
Here 'dbp:' has been mapped to the URI for DBPedia and 'foaf:' has been mapped to the URI for the 'Friend of a Friend' taxonomy.
Any URI in Turtle could be abbreviated in this way. This means that we could also have used the same technique to abbreviate the identifier for Einstein, as well as the datatype indicator:
@prefix dbp: <http://dbpedia.org/property/> . @prefix dbr: <http://dbpedia.org/resource/> . @prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> . @prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#> . dbr:Albert_Einstein dbp:dateOfBirth "1879-03-14"^^xsd:date . dbr:Albert_Einstein foaf:depiction <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg> .
When writing examples, you will often see the following URI in the Turtle representation:
<>
This indicates the 'current document', i.e., the document being processed. In reality there would always be a full URI based on the document's location, but this abbreviation serves to make examples more compact. Note in particular that the whole technique of abbreviation is merely a way to make examples more compact, and the actual triples generated would always use the full URIs.
A collection of triples is called a graph . All of the triples that are defined by this specification are contained in the default graph by an RDFa Processor. For more information on graphs and other RDF concepts, see [ RDF-CONCEPTS ].
In order to allow for the compact expression of RDF statements, RDFa allows the contraction of most URI reference s into a form called a 'compact URI', or CURIE . A detailed discussion of this mechanism is in the section CURIE and URI Processing .
Note that CURIEs are only used in the markup and Turtle examples, and will never appear in the generated triple s, which are defined by RDF to use URI reference s.
Full details on how CURIEs are processed are in the section titled CURIE Processing .
A growing use of embedded metadata is to take fragments of markup and move them from one document to another. This may happen through the use of tools, such as drag-and-drop in a browser, or through snippets of code provided to authors for inclusion in their documents. (A good example of the latter is the licensing fragment provided by Creative Commons.)
However, those involved in creating fragments (either by building tools, or authoring snippets), should be aware that this specification does not say how fragments are processed. Specifically, the processing of a fragment 'outside' of a complete document is undefined because RDFa processing is largely about context. Future versions of this or related specifications may do more to define this behavior.
Developers of tools that process fragments, or authors of fragments for manual inclusion, should also bear in mind what will happen to their fragment once it is included in a complete document. They should carefully consider the amount of 'context' information that will be needed in order to ensure a correct interpretation of their fragment.
The following is a brief description of RDFa in terms of the RDF terminology introduced here. It may be useful to readers with an RDF background:
The aim of RDFa is to allow a single RDF graph to be carried in various types of document markup. An RDF graph comprises node s linked by relationships. The basic unit of an RDF graph is a triple , in which a subject node is linked to an object node via a predicate . The subject node is always either a URI reference or a blank node (or bnode) , the predicate is always a URI reference , and the object of a statement can be a URI reference , a literal , or a bnode .
In RDFa, a subject URI reference is generally indicated using @about , and predicates are represented using one of @property , @rel , or @rev . Objects which are URI reference s are represented using @href , @resource or @src , whilst objects that are literal s are represented either with @content or the content of the element in question (with an optional datatype expressed using @datatype , and an optional language expressed using a Host Language-defined mechanism such as @xml:lang ).
As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.
The key words must , must not , required , should , should not , recommended , may , and optional in this specification are to be interpreted as described in [ RFC2119 ].
A conforming RDFa Processor must make available to a consuming application a single RDF graph containing all possible triples generated by using the rules in the Processing Model section. This specification uses the term default graph to mean all of the triples asserted by a document according to the Processing Model section. The processor graph term is used to denote the collection of all informational, warning, and error triples that are generated by the RDFa Processor as a result of processing the document. The default graph and the processor graph are separate graphs and must not be stored in the same graph by the RDFa Processor.
A conforming RDFa Processor may make available additional triples that have been generated using rules not described here, but these triples must not be made available in the default graph . (Whether these additional triples are made available in one or more additional RDF graph s is implementation-specific, and therefore not defined here.)
A
conforming
RDFa
Processor
must
preserve
whitespace
white
space
in
both
plain
literal
s
and
XML
literals
.
However,
it
may
be
the
case
that
the
architecture
in
which
a
processor
operates
does
not
make
all
whitespace
white
space
available.
It
is
therefore
advisable
for
authors
who
would
like
to
make
their
documents
consumable
across
different
processors,
to
remove
any
unnecessary
whitespace
white
space
in
their
markup.
Host Languages that incorporate RDFa must adhere to the following:
This specification defines a number of attributes and the way in which the values of those attributes are to be interpreted when generating RDF triples. This section defines the attributes and the syntax of their values.
CDATA
string,
for
supplying
machine-readable
content
for
a
literal
(a
'plain
literal
object',
in
RDF
terminology);
NCName ':' ' '+ xs:anyURI
The key component of RDF is the URI, but these are usually long and unwieldy. RDFa therefore supports a mechanism by which URIs can be abbreviated, called 'compact URIs' or simply, CURIEs.
A
CURIE
is
comprised
of
two
components,
a
prefix
and
a
reference
.
The
prefix
is
separated
from
the
reference
by
a
colon
(
:
).
In
general
use
it
is
possible
to
omit
the
prefix,
and
so
create
a
CURIE
that
makes
use
of
the
'default
prefix'
mapping;
in
RDFa
the
'default
prefix'
mapping
is
http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/vocab#
.
It's
also
possible
to
omit
both
the
prefix
and
the
colon,
and
so
create
a
CURIE
that
contains
just
a
reference
which
makes
use
of
the
'no
prefix'
mapping.
This
specification
does
not
define
a
default
'no
prefix'
mapping.
However,
Host
Languages
may
define
a
default.
This
mapping
may
be
changed
via
@vocab
.
The
general
syntax
of
a
CURIE
can
be
summarised
summarized
as
follows:
prefix ::= NCName])reference ::= irelative-ref (as defined in [RFC3987]) curie ::= [ [ prefix ] ':' ] reference safe_curie ::= '[' [ [ prefix ] ':' ] reference ']'
The
production
safe_curie
is
not
required,
even
in
situations
where
an
attribute
value
is
permitted
to
be
a
CURIE
or
a
URI:
A
URI
that
uses
a
scheme
that
is
not
an
in-scope
mapping
cannot
be
confused
with
a
CURIE.
The
concept
of
a
safe_curie
is
retained
for
backward
compatibility.
In normal evaluation of CURIEs the following context information would need to be provided:
:p
);
p
);
_:p
).
In RDFa these values are defined as follows:
A CURIE is a representation of a full URI. The rules for determining that URI are:
prefix
and
a
reference
,
the
URI
is
obtained
by
taking
the
current
default
prefix
mapping
and
concatenating
it
with
the
reference
.
If
there
is
no
current
default
prefix
mapping,
then
this
is
not
a
valid
CURIE
and
must
be
ignored.
prefix
and
reference
,
and
if
there
is
an
in-scope
mapping
for
prefix
,
then
the
URI
is
created
by
using
that
mapping,
and
concatenating
it
with
the
reference
.
prefix
,
then
the
value
is
not
a
CURIE.
This section looks at a generic set of processing rules for creating a set of triples that represent the structured data present in an RDFa document. Processing need not follow the DOM traversal technique outlined here, although the effect of following some other manner of processing must be the same as if the processing outlined here were followed. The processing model is explained using the idea of DOM traversal which makes it easier to describe (particularly in relation to the evaluation context ).
Evaluating a document for RDFa triples is carried out by starting at the document object, and then visiting each of its child elements in turn, in document order, applying processing rules. Processing is recursive in that for each child element the processor also visits each of its child elements, and applies the same processing rules.
In some environments there will be little difference between starting at the root element of the document, and starting at the document object itself. It is defined this way because in some environments important information is present at the document object level which is not present on the root element.
As processing continues, rules are applied which may generate triples, and may also change the evaluation context information that will then be used when processing descendant elements.
This
specification
does
not
say
anything
about
what
should
happen
to
the
triples
generated,
or
whether
more
triples
might
be
generated
during
processing
than
are
outlined
here.
However,
to
be
conforming,
an
RDFa
processor
Processor
must
act
as
if
at
a
minimum
the
rules
in
this
section
are
applied,
and
a
single
RDF
graph
produced.
As
described
in
the
RDFa
Processor
Conformance
section,
any
additional
triples
generated
must
not
appear
in
the
default
graph
.
During processing, each rule is applied using information provided by an evaluation context . An initial context is created when processing begins. That context has the following members:
base
element.
The
important
thing
is
that
it
establishes
a
URL
against
which
relative
paths
can
be
resolved.
During the course of processing, new evaluation context s are created which are passed to each child element. The rules described below will determine the values of the items in the context. Additionally, some rules will cause new triples to be created by combining information provided by an element with information from the evaluation context .
During the course of processing a number of locally scoped values are needed, as follows:
false
would
have
that
effect.
Statement chaining is an RDFa feature that allows the author to link RDF statements together while avoiding unnecessary repetitive markup. For example, if an author were to add statements as children of an object that was a resource, these statements should be interpreted as being about that resource:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany"> <span property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span> </div> </div>
In this example we can see that an object resource ('Germany'), has become the subject for nested statements. This markup also illustrates the basic chaining pattern of 'A has a B has a C' (i.e., Einstein has a birth place of Germany, which has a long name of "Federal Republic of Germany").
It's also possible for the subject of nested statements to provide the object for containing statements — essentially the reverse of the example we have just seen. To illustrate, we'll take an example of the type of chaining just described, and show how it could be marked up more efficiently. To start, we mark up the fact that Albert Einstein had both German and American citizenship:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <div rel="dbp:citizenship" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany"></div> <div rel="dbp:citizenship" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States"></div> </div>
Now, we show the same information, but this time we create an incomplete triple from the citizenship part, and then use any number of further subjects to 'complete' that triple, as follows:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein" rel="dbp:citizenship"> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany"></span> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States"></span> </div>
In this example, the incomplete triple actually gets completed twice, once for Germany and once for the USA, giving exactly the same information as we had in the earlier example:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States> .
Chaining
can
sometimes
involve
elements
containing
relatively
minimal
markup,
for
example
showing
only
one
resource,
or
only
one
predicate.
Here
the
img
element
is
used
to
carry
a
picture
of
Einstein:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <div rel="foaf:depiction"> <img src="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Albert_Einstein_Head.jpg" /> </div> </div>
When such minimal markup is used, any of the resource-related attributes could act as a subject or an object in the chaining:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <div rel="dbp:citizenship"> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany"></span> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States"></span> </div> </div>
Since
RDFa
is
ultimately
a
means
for
transporting
RDF,
a
key
concept
is
the
resource
and
its
manifestation
as
a
URI.
RDF
deals
with
complete
URIs
(not
relative
paths);
when
converting
RDFa
to
triples,
any
relative
URIs
must
be
resolved
relative
to
the
base
URI,
using
the
algorithm
defined
in
section
5
of
RFC
3986
[
URI
],
Reference
Resolution
.
The
values
of
RDFa
attributes
that
refer
to
URIs
use
three
different
datatypes:
URI
,
SafeCURIEorCURIEorURI
,
or
TERMorCURIEorURI
TERMorCURIEorAbsURI
.
All
these
attributes
are
mapped,
after
processing,
to
URIs.
The
handling
of
these
attributes
is
as
follows:
Note that it is possible for all values in an attribute to be ignored. When that happens, the attribute must be treated as if it were empty.
For
example,
the
full
URI
for
Albert
Einstein
on
DPPedia
DBPedia
is:
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein
This can be shortened by authors to make the information easier to manage, using a CURIE. The first step is for the author to create a prefix mapping that links a prefix to some leading segment of the URI. In RDFa these mappings are expressed using the XML namespace syntax:
<div prefix="db: http://dbpedia.org/"> ... </div>
Once the prefix has been established, an author can then use it to shorten a URI as follows:
<div prefix="db: http://dbpedia.org/"> <div about="db:resource/Albert_Einstein"> ... </div> </div>
The author is free to split the URI at any point, as long as it begins at the left end. However, since a common use of CURIEs is to make available libraries of terms and values, the prefix will usually be mapped to some common segment that provides the most re-use, often provided by those who manage the library of terms. For example, since DBPedia contains an enormous list of resources, it is more efficient to create a prefix mapping that uses the base location of the resources:
<div prefix="dbr: http://dbpedia.org/resource/"> <div about="dbr:Albert_Einstein"> ... </div> <div about="dbr:Baruch_Spinoza"> ... </div> </div>
CURIE prefix mappings are defined on the current element and its descendants. For example, the URIs expressed by the following two CURIEs are different, despite the common prefix, because the prefix mappings are locally scoped:
<div prefix="dbr: http://dbpedia.org/resource/"> <div about="dbr:Albert_Einstein"> ... </div> </div> <div prefix="dbr: http://someotherdb.org/resource/"> <div about="dbr:Albert_Einstein"> ... </div> </div>
There are a number of ways that attributes make use of CURIEs, and they need to be dealt with differently. These are:
An
empty
attribute
value
(e.g.,
typeof=''
)
is
still
a
CURIE,
and
is
processed
as
such.
The
rules
for
this
processing
are
defined
in
Sequence
.
Specifically,
however,
an
empty
attribute
value
is
never
treated
as
a
relative
URI
by
this
specification.
An example of an attribute that can contain a CURIEorURI is @about . To express a URI directly, an author might do this:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> ... </div>
whilst to express the URL above as a CURIE they would do this:
<div about="dbr:Albert_Einstein"> ... </div>
The author could also use a safe CURIE, as follows:
<div about="[dbr:Albert_Einstein]"> ... </div>
Since non-CURIE values must be ignored, the following value in @about would not set a new subject, since @about does not permit the use of TERM s, and the CURIE has no prefix separator.
<div about="[Albert_Einstein]"> ... </div>
However, this markup would set a subject, since it is not a CURIE, but a valid relative URI:
<div about="Albert_Einstein"> ... </div>
Note that several RDFa attributes are able to also take TERMS as their value. This is discussed in the next section.
Some RDFa attributes have a datatype that permits a term to be referenced. RDFa defines the syntax of a term as:
term ::= NCName
When an RDFa attribute permits the use of a term, and the value being evaluated matches the production for term above, it is transformed to a URI using the following logic:
term
term
.
term
has
no
associated
URI
and
must
be
ignored.
One
ramification
of
these
rules
is
that,
if
an
attribute
has
the
datatype
TERMorCURIEorURI
TERMorCURIEorAbsURI
,
and
the
value
matches
the
production
for
term
but
there
is
no
local
default
vocabulary
,
then
the
term
is
ignored.
The general rules discussed in the previous sections apply to the RDFa attributes in the following ways:
Any value that matches a defined term must be expanded into a reference to the corresponding URI. For example in [ XHTML-RDFA ] the following examples:
<link rel="next" href="http://example.org/page2.html" /> <link rel=" xhv:next " href="http://example.org/page2.html" />
would each generate the following triple:
<> <http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/vocab#next> <http://example.org/page2.html> .
In RDFa, it is possible to establish relationships using various types of resource references, including bnode s. If a subject or object is defined using a CURIE, and that CURIE explicitly names a bnode , then a Conforming Processor must create the bnode when it is encountered during parsing. The RDFa Processor must also ensure that no bnode created automatically (as a result of chaining ) has a name that collides with a bnode that is defined by explicit reference in a CURIE.
Consider the following example:
<link about="_:john" rel="foaf:mbox" href="mailto:john@example.org" /> <link about="_:sue" rel="foaf:mbox" href="mailto:sue@example.org" /> <link about="_:john" rel="foaf:knows" resource="_:sue" />
In the above fragment, two bnodes are explicitly created as the subject of triples. Those bnodes are then referenced to demonstrate the relationship between the parties. After processing, the following triples will be generated:
_:john foaf:mbox <mailto:john@example.org> . _:sue foaf:mbox <mailto:sue@example.org> . _:john foaf:knows _:sue .
As
a
special
case,
_:
is
also
a
valid
reference
for
one
specific
bnode
.
Processing
would
normally
begin
after
the
document
to
be
parsed
has
been
completely
loaded.
However,
there
is
no
requirement
for
this
to
be
the
case,
and
it
is
certainly
possible
to
use
a
stream-based
approach,
such
as
SAX
[
SAX
]
to
extract
the
RDFa
information.
However,
if
some
approach
other
than
the
DOM
traversal
technique
defined
here
is
used,
it
is
important
to
ensure
that
Host
Language-specific
processing
rules
are
applied
(e.g.,
XHTML+RDFa
[
XHTML-RDFA
]
indicates
the
base
element
can
be
used,
and
base
will
affect
the
interpretation
of
URIs
in
meta
or
link
elements
even
if
those
elements
are
before
the
base
element
in
the
stream).
At the beginning of processing, an initial evaluation context is created, as follows:
base
element);
Processing begins by applying the processing rules below to the document object, in the context of this initial evaluation context . All elements in the tree are also processed according to the rules described below, depth-first, although the evaluation context used for each set of rules will be based on previous rules that may have been applied.
This
specification
assumes
that
certain
elements
are
present
in
the
Host
Language
(e.g.,
head
).
If
these
elements
are
not
supported
in
the
Host
Language,
then
the
corresponding
processing
rules
are
not
relevant
for
that
language.
The working group as not reached consensus as to whether to include the optional attributes in this specification, or whether to have them defined in the relevant Host Language specifications.
The processing rules are:
If no URI is provided by a resource attribute, then the first match from the following rules will apply:
If no URI is provided then the first match from the following rules will apply:
Then the current object resource is set to the URI obtained from the first match from the following rules:
Note that final value of the current object resource will either be null (from initialization) or a full URI.
rdf:XMLLiteral
XMLLiteral
in
the
vocabulary
http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
.
The actual literal is either the value of @content (if present) or a string created by concatenating the value of all descendant text nodes, of the current element in turn. The final string includes the datatype URI, as described in [ RDF-CONCEPTS ], which will have been obtained according to the section on CURIE and URI Processing .
XMLLiteral
in
the
vocabulary
http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
.
The
value
of
the
current
element
XML
literal
are
text
nodes;
or
there
are
no
child
is
a
string
created
by
serializing
to
text,
all
nodes
(in
which
case
that
are
descendants
of
the
literal
value
is
current
element
,
i.e.,
not
including
the
empty
string);
or
element
itself,
and
giving
it
a
datatype
of
XMLLiteral
in
the
body
vocabulary
http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
.
The
format
of
the
current
element
does
have
non-text
child
nodes
but
@datatype
resulting
serialized
content
is
present,
with
an
empty
value.
as
defined
in
Exclusive
XML
Canonicalization
Version
[
XML-EXC-C14N
].
Additionally, if there is a value for current language then the value of the plain literal should include this language information, as described in [ RDF-CONCEPTS ]. The actual literal is either the value of @content (if present) or a string created by concatenating the text content of each of the descendant elements of the current element in document order.
The
value
of
the
XML
literal
is
a
string
created
by
serializing
to
text,
all
nodes
that
are
descendants
of
the
current
element
,
i.e.,
not
including
the
element
itself,
and
giving
it
a
datatype
of
rdf:XMLLiteral
.
The
format
of
the
resulting
serialized
content
is
as
defined
in
Exclusive
XML
Canonicalization
Version
[
XML-EXC-C14N
].
The
current
object
literal
is
then
used
with
each
predicate
to
generate
a
triple
as
follows:
Once
the
triple
has
been
created,
if
the
datatype
of
the
current
object
literal
is
rdf:XMLLiteral
,
then
the
recurse
flag
is
set
to
false
.
The processing rules covered in the previous section are designed to extract as many triples as possible from a document. The RDFa Processor is designed to continue processing, even in the event of errors. For example, failing to resolve a prefix mapping or term would result in the RDFa Processor skipping the generation of a triple and continuing with document processing. There are cases where knowing each RDFa Processor warning or error would be beneficial to authors. The processor graph is designed as a mechanism to capture all informational, warning, and error messages as triples from the RDFa Processor. These status triples may be retrieved and used to aid RDFa authoring or automated error detection.
If an RDFa Processor supports the generation of a processor graph, then it must generate a set of triples when the following processing issues occur:
Other implementation-specific INFORMATIONAL, WARNING, or ERROR triples may be generated by the RDFa Processor.
Accessing the processor graph may be accomplished in a variety of ways and is dependent on the type of RDFa Processor and access method that the developer is utilizing.
SAX-based processors or processors that utilize function or method callbacks to report the generation of triples are classified as event-based RDFa Processor s. For Event-based RDFa Processors, the software must allow the developer to register a function or callback that is called when a triple is generated for the processor graph . The callback may be the same as the one that is used for the default graph as long as it can be determined if a generated triple belongs in the processor graph or the default graph .
A whole-graph RDFa Processor is defined as any RDFa Processor that processes the entire document and only allows developer access to the triples after processing has completed. RDFa Processors that typically fall into this category express their output via a single call using RDF/XML, N3, TURTLE, or N-Triples notation. For whole-graph RDFa Processors, the software must allow the developer to specify if they would like to retrieve the default graph , the processor graph , or both graphs as a single, combined graph from the RDFa Processor. If the graph preference is not specified, the default graph must be returned.
An
web
service
RDFa
Processor
is
defined
as
any
RDFa
Processor
that
is
capable
of
processing
a
document
by
performing
an
HTTP
GET,
POST
or
similar
action
on
an
RDFa
Processor
URL.
For
this
class
of
RDFa
Processor,
the
software
must
allow
the
caller
to
specify
if
they
would
like
to
retrieve
the
default
graph
,
the
processor
graph
,
or
both
graphs
as
a
single,
combined
graph
from
the
web
service.
The
rdfagraph
query
parameter
must
be
used
to
specify
the
value.
The
allowable
values
are
default
,
processor
or
both
values,
in
any
order,
separated
by
a
comma
character.
If
the
graph
preference
is
not
specified,
the
default
graph
must
be
returned.
This section provides an in-depth examination of the processing steps described in the previous section. It also includes examples which may help clarify some of the steps involved.
The key to processing is that a triple is generated whenever a predicate/object combination is detected. The actual triple generated will include a subject that may have been set previously, so this is tracked in the current evaluation context and is called the parent subject . Since the subject will default to the current document if it hasn't been set explicitly, then a predicate/object combination is always enough to generate one or more triples.
The attributes for setting a predicate are @rel , @rev and @property , whilst the attributes for setting an object are @resource , @href , @content , and @src . @typeof is unique in that it sets both a predicate and an object at the same time (and also a subject when it appears in the absence of other attributes that would set a subject). Inline content might also set an object, if @content is not present, but @property is present.
When triples are created they will always be in relation to a subject resource which is provided either by new subject (if there are rules on the current element that have set a subject) or parent subject , as passed in via the evaluation context . This section looks at the specific ways in which these values are set. Note that it doesn't matter how the subject is set, so in this section we use the idea of the current subject which may be either new subject or parent subject .
When
parsing
begins,
the
current
subject
will
be
the
URI
of
the
document
being
parsed,
or
a
value
as
set
by
a
Host
Language-provided
mechanism
such
as
the
base
element
in
(X)HTML.
This
means
that
any
metadata
found
in
the
head
of
the
document
will
concern
the
document
itself:
<html> <head> <title>Jo's Friends and Family Blog</title> <link rel="foaf:primaryTopic" href="#bbq" /> <meta property="dc:creator" content="Jo" /> </head> <body> ... </body> </html>
This would generate the following triples:
<> foaf:primaryTopic <#bbq> . <> dc:creator "Jo" .
It is possible for the data to appear elsewhere in the document:
<html> <head> <title>Jo's Blog</title> </head> <body> <h1><span property="dc:creator">Jo</span>'s blog</h1> <p> Welcome to my blog. </p> </body> </html>
which would still generate the triple:
<> dc:creator "Jo" .
In
(X)HTML
the
value
of
base
may
change
the
initial
value
of
current
subject
:
<html> <head> <base href="http://www.example.org/jo/blog" /> <title>Jo's Friends and Family Blog</title> <link rel="foaf:primaryTopic" href="#bbq" /> <meta property="dc:creator" content="Jo" /> </head> <body> ... </body> </html>
An RDFa Processor should now generate the following triples, regardless of the URL from which the document is served:
<http://www.example.org/jo/blog> foaf:primaryTopic <#bbq> . <http://www.example.org/jo/blog> dc:creator "Jo" .
As
processing
progresses,
any
@about
attributes
will
change
the
current
subject
.
The
value
of
@about
is
a
URI
or
a
CURIE.
If
it
is
a
relative
URI
then
it
needs
to
be
resolved
against
the
current
base
value.
To
illustrate
how
this
affects
the
statements,
note
in
this
markup
how
the
properties
inside
the
(X)HTML
body
element
become
part
of
a
new
calendar
event
object,
rather
than
referring
to
the
document
as
they
do
in
the
head
of
the
document:
<html> <head> <title>Jo's Friends and Family Blog</title> <link rel="foaf:primaryTopic" href="#bbq" /> <meta property="dc:creator" content="Jo" /> </head> <body> <p about="#bbq" typeof="cal:Vevent"> I'm holding <span property="cal:summary"> one last summer barbecue </span>, on <span property="cal:dtstart" content="2015-09-16T16:00:00-05:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime"> September 16th at 4pm </span>. </p> </body> </html>
With this markup an RDFa Processor will generate the following triples:
<> foaf:primaryTopic <#bbq> . <> dc:creator "Jo" . <#bbq> rdf:type cal:Vevent . <#bbq> cal:summary "one last summer barbecue" . <#bbq>cal:dtastartcal:dtstart "2015-09-16T16:00:00-05:00"^^xsd:dateTime .
Other kinds of resources can be used to set the current subject , not just references to web-pages. Although not advised, email addresses might be used to represent a person:
John knows <a about="mailto:john@example.org" rel="foaf:knows" href="mailto:sue@example.org">Sue</a>. Sue knows <a about="mailto:sue@example.org" rel="foaf:knows" href="mailto:jim@example.org">Jim</a>.
This should generate the following triples:
<mailto:john@example.org> foaf:knows <mailto:sue@example.org> . <mailto:sue@example.org> foaf:knows <mailto:jim@example.org> .
Similarly, authors may make statements about images:
<div about="photo1.jpg"> this photo was taken by <span property="dc:creator">Mark Birbeck</span> </div>
which should generate the following triples:
<photo1.jpg> dc:creator "Mark Birbeck" .
If @about is not present, then @src is next in priority order, for setting the subject of a statement. A typical use would be to indicate the licensing type of an image:
<img src="photo1.jpg" rel="license" resource="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" />
Since there is no difference between @src and @about , then the information expressed in the last example in the section on @about (the creator of an image), could be expressed as follows:
<img src="photo1.jpg" rel="license" resource="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" property="dc:creator" content="Mark Birbeck" />
Since normal chaining rules will apply, the image URL can also be used to complete hanging triples:
<div about="http://www.blogger.com/profile/1109404" rel="foaf:img"> <img src="photo1.jpg" rel="license" resource="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/" property="dc:creator" content="Mark Birbeck" /> </div>
The complete markup yields three triples:
<http://www.blogger.com/profile/1109404> foaf:img <photo1.jpg> . <photo1.jpg> xhv:license <http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/> . <photo1.jpg> dc:creator "Mark Birbeck" .
Whilst
@about
explicitly
creates
a
new
context
for
statements,
@typeof
does
so
implicitly.
@typeof
works
differently
to
other
ways
of
setting
a
predicate
since
the
predicate
is
always
rdf:type
,
which
means
that
the
processor
only
requires
one
attribute,
the
value
of
the
type.
Since @typeof is setting the type of an item, this means that if no item exists one should automatically be created. This involves generating a new bnode , and is examined in more detail below; it is mentioned here because the bnode used by the new item will become the subject for further statements.
For example, an author may wish to create markup for a person using the FOAF vocabulary, but without having a clear identifier for the item:
<div typeof="foaf:Person"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span><span property="foaf:givenname">Albert</span><span property="foaf:givenName">Albert</span> </div>
This
markup
would
cause
a
bnode
to
be
created
which
has
a
'type'
of
foaf:Person
,
as
well
as
name
and
given
name
properties:
_:a rdf:type foaf:Person . _:a foaf:name "Albert Einstein" . _:afoaf:givennamefoaf:givenName "Albert" .
_:a
as
being
distinct
from
_:b
.
But
by
not
exposing
these
values
to
any
external
software,
it
is
possible
to
have
complete
control
over
the
identifier,
as
well
as
preventing
further
statements
being
made
about
the
item.
As described in the previous two sections, @about will always take precedence and mark a new subject, but if no @about value is available then @typeof will do the same job, although using an implied identifier, i.e., a bnode .
But if neither @about or @typeof are present, there are a number of ways that the subject could be arrived at. One of these is to 'inherit' the subject from the containing statement, with the value to be inherited set either explicitly, or implicitly.
The most usual way that an inherited subject might get set would be when the parent statement has an object that is a resource. Returning to the earlier example, in which the long name for Germany was added, the following markup was used:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" /> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span> </div>
In an earlier illustration the subject and object for Germany were elided by removing the @resource , relying on the @about to set the object:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace"> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span> </div> </div>
but it is also possible for authors to achieve the same effect by removing the @about and leaving the @resource :
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany"> <span property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span> </div> </div>
In this situation, all statements that are 'contained' by the object resource representing Germany (the value in @resource ) will have the same subject, making it easy for authors to add additional statements:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany"> <span property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span> <span rel="dbp:capital" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Berlin" /> </div> </div>
Looking at the triples that an RDFa Processor would generate, we can see that we actually have two groups of statements; the first group are set to refer to the @about that contains them:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> foaf:name "Albert Einstein" . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:dateOfBirth "1879-03-14"^^xsd:date . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:birthPlace <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> .
whilst the second group refer to the @resource that contains them:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> dbp:conventionalLongName "Federal Republic of Germany" . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> dbp:capital <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Berlin> .
Note also that the same principle described here applies to @src and @href .
There will be occasions when the author wants to elide the subject and object as shown above, but is not concerned to name the resource that is common to the two statements (i.e., the object of the first statement, which is the subject of the second). For example, to indicate that Einstein was influenced by Spinoza the following markup could well be used:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza" rel="dbp:influenced"> <div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> </div> </div>
An RDFa Processor will generate the following triples:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza> dbp:influenced <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> foaf:name "Albert Einstein" . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:dateOfBirth "1879-03-14"^^xsd:date .
However, an author could just as easily say that Spinoza influenced something by the name of Albert Einstein, that was born on March 14th, 1879 :
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza" rel="dbp:influenced"> <div> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> </div> </div>
In RDF terms, the item that 'represents' Einstein is anonymous , since it has no URI to identify it. However, the item is given an automatically generated bnode , and it is onto this identifier that all child statements are attached:
An RDFa Processor will generate the following triples:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza> dbp:influenced _:a . _:a foaf:name "Albert Einstein" . _:a dbp:dateOfBirth "1879-03-14"^^xsd:date .
Note
that
the
div
is
superfluous,
and
an
RDFa
Processor
will
create
the
intermediate
object
even
if
the
element
is
removed:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza" rel="dbp:influenced"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> </div>
An
alternative
pattern
is
to
keep
the
div
and
move
the
@rel
onto
it:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza"> <div rel="dbp:influenced"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> </div> </div>
From the point of view of the markup, this latter layout is to be preferred, since it draws attention to the 'hanging rel'. But from the point of view of an RDFa Processor, all of these permutations need to be supported.
When a new subject is calculated, it is also used to complete any incomplete triples that are pending. This situation arises when the author wants to 'chain' a number of statements together. For example, an author could have a statement that Albert Einstein was born in Germany:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" /> </div>
and then a further statement that the 'long name' for Germany is the Federal Republic of Germany :
<span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span>
RDFa allows authors to insert this statement as a self-contained unit into other contexts:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace" resource="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" /> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span> </div>
But it also allows authors to avoid unnecessary repetition and to 'normalize' out duplicate identifiers, in this case the one for Germany:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:birthPlace"> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" property="dbp:conventionalLongName">Federal Republic of Germany</span> </div> </div>
When this happens the @rel for 'birth place' is regarded as a 'hanging rel' because it has not yet generated any triples, but these 'incomplete triples' are completed by the @about that appears on the next line. The first step is therefore to store the two parts of the triple that the RDFa Processor does have, but without an object:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein>
dbp:birthPlace
?
.
Then as processing continues, the RDFa Processor encounters the subject of the statement about the long name for Germany, and this is used in two ways. First it is used to complete the 'incomplete triple':
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein>
dbp:birthPlace
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany>
.
and second it is used to generate its own triple:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> dbp:conventionalLongName "Federal Republic of Germany" .
Note that each occurrence of @about will complete any incomplete triples. For example, to mark up the fact that Albert Einstein had both German and American citizenship, an author need only specify one @rel value that is then used with multiple @about values:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein" rel="dbp:citizenship"> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" /> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States" /> </div>
In this example there is one incomplete triple:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein>
dbp:citizenship
?
.
When the processor meets each of the @about values, this triple is completed, giving:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein> dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States> .
These examples show how @about completes triples, but there are other situations that can have the same effect. For example, when @typeof creates a new bnode (as described above), that will be used to complete any 'incomplete triples'. To illustrate, to indicate that Spinoza influenced both Einstein and Schopenhauer, the following markup could be used:
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza"> <div rel="dbp:influenced"> <div typeof="foaf:Person"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> </div> <div typeof="foaf:Person"> <span property="foaf:name">Arthur Schopenhauer</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1788-02-22</span> </div> </div> </div>
First the following incomplete triple is stored:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza>
dbp:influenced
?
.
Then when the RDFa Processor processes the two occurrences of @typeof , each generates a bnode , which is used to both complete the 'incomplete triple', and to set the subject for further statements:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza"> dbp:influenced _:a . _:a rdf:type foaf:Person . _:a foaf:name "Albert Einstein" . _:a dbp:dateOfBirth "1879-03-14"^^xsd:date . <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza"> dbp:influenced _:b . _:b rdf:type foaf:Person . _:b foaf:name "Arthur Schopenhauer" . _:b dbp:dateOfBirth "1788-02-22"^^xsd:date .
Triples are also 'completed' if any one of @property , @rel or @rev are present. However, unlike the situation when @about or @typeof are present, all predicates are attached to one bnode :
<div about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza" rel="dbp:influenced"> <span property="foaf:name">Albert Einstein</span> <span property="dbp:dateOfBirth" datatype="xsd:date">1879-03-14</span> <div rel="dbp:citizenship"> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany" /> <span about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States" /> </div> </div>
This example has two 'hanging rels', and so two situations when 'incomplete triples' will be created. Processing would proceed as follows; first an incomplete triple is stored:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza>
dbp:influenced
?
.
Next,
the
RDFa
Processor
processes
the
predicate
values
for
foaf:name
,
dbp:dateOfBirth
and
dbp:citizenship
,
but
note
that
only
the
first
needs
to
'complete'
the
'hanging
rel'.
So
processing
foaf:name
generates
two
triples:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza> dbp:influenced _:a . _:a foaf:name"Alber"Albert Einstein" .
but
processing
dbp:dateOfBirth
generates
only
one:
_:a
dbp:dateOfBirth
"1879-03-14"^^xsd:date
.
Processing
dbp:citizenship
also
uses
the
same
bnode
,
but
note
that
it
also
generates
its
own
'incomplete
triple':
_:a
dbp:citizenship
?
.
As before, the two occurrences of @about complete the 'incomplete triple', once each:
_:a dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> . _:a dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States> .
The entire set of triples that an RDFa Processor should generate are as follows:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baruch_Spinoza> dbp:influenced _:a . _:a foaf:name "Albert Einstein" . _:a dbp:dateOfBirth "1879-03-14"^^xsd:date . _:a dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Germany> . _:a dbp:citizenship <http://dbpedia.org/resource/United_States> .
Although objects have been discussed in the previous sections, as part of the explanation of subject resolution, chaining, evaluation contexts, and so on, this section will look at objects in more detail.
There are two types of object, URI resource s and literal s.
A literal object can be set by using @property to express a predicate , and then using either @content , or the inline text of the element that @property is on. Note that the use of @content prohibits the inclusion of rich markup in your literal. If the inline content of an element accurately represents the object, then documents should rely upon that rather than duplicating that data using the @content .
A URI resource object can be set using one of @rel or @rev to express a predicate , and then either using one of @href , @resource or @src to provide an object resource explicitly, or using the chaining techniques described above to obtain an object from a nested subject, or from a bnode .
An object literal will be generated when @property is present. @property provides the predicate, and the following sections describe how the actual literal to be generated is determined.
@content can be used to indicate a plain literal , as follows:
<meta about="http://internet-apps.blogspot.com/" property="dc:creator" content="Mark Birbeck" />
The plain literal can also be specified by using the content of the element:
<span about="http://internet-apps.blogspot.com/" property="dc:creator"> Mark Birbeck </span>
Both of these examples give the following triple:
<http://internet-apps.blogspot.com/> dc:creator "Mark Birbeck" .
The value of @content is given precedence over any element content, so the following would give exactly the same triple as shown above:
<span about="http://internet-apps.blogspot.com/" property="dc:creator" content="Mark Birbeck" >John Doe</span>
RDF allows plain literal s to have a language tag, as illustrated by the following example from [ RDF-TESTCASES ]:
<http://example.org/node> <http://example.org/property> "chat" @fr .
In RDFa the Host Language may provide a mechanism for setting the language tag. In XHTML+RDFa [ XHTML-RDFA ], for example, the XML language attribute @xml:lang or the attribute @lang is used to add this information, whether the plain literal is designated by @content , or by the inline text of the element:
<meta about="http://example.org/node" property="ex:property" xml:lang="fr" content="chat" />
Note that the language value can be inherited as defined in [ XML10-4e ], so the following syntax will give the same triple as above:
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" prefix="ex: http://www.example.com/ns/" xml:lang="fr"> <head> <title xml:lang="en">Example</title> <meta about="http://example.org/node" property="ex:property" content="chat" /> </head> ... </html>
Literals can be given a data type using @datatype .
This can be represented in RDFa as follows:
<span property="cal:dtstart" content="2015-09-16T16:00:00-05:00" datatype="xsd:dateTime"> September 16th at 4pm </span>.
The triples that this markup generates include the datatype after the literal:
<>
cal:dtstart
"2015-09-16T16:00:00-05:00"^^
xsd:dateTime
.
XML documents cannot contain XML markup in their attributes, which means it is not possible to represent XML within @content (the following would cause an XML parser to generate an error):
<head> <meta property="dc:title" content="E = mc<sup>2</sup>: The Most Urgent Problem of Our Time" /> </head>
It does not help to escape the content, since the output would simply be a string of text containing numerous ampersands:
<>
dc:title
"E
=
mc
<sup>2&lt;/sup>
:
The
Most
Urgent
Problem
of
Our
Time"
.
RDFa therefore supports the use of normal markup to express XML literals, by using @datatype :
<h2 property="dc:title" datatype="rdf:XMLLiteral"> E = mc<sup>2</sup>: The Most Urgent Problem of Our Time </h2>
This would generate the following triple, with the XML preserved in the literal:
<> dc:title "E = mc<sup>2</sup>: The Most Urgent Problem of Our Time"^^rdf:XMLLiteral .
Note
that
this
requires
that
a
URI
mapping
for
the
prefix
rdf
has
been
defined.
To
make
authoring
easier,
if
there
are
child
elements
and
no
@datatype
attribute,
then
the
effect
is
the
same
as
if
@datatype
have
been
explicitly
set
to
rdf:XMLLiteral
:
<h2 property="dc:title"> E = mc<sup>2</sup>: The Most Urgent Problem of Our Time </h2>
In
the
examples
given
here
the
sup
element
is
actually
part
of
the
meaning
of
the
literal,
but
there
will
be
situations
where
the
extra
markup
means
nothing,
and
can
therefore
be
ignored.
In
this
situation
an
empty
@datatype
value
can
be
used
to
override
the
XML
literal
behaviour:
<p>You searched for <strong>Einstein</strong>:</p> <p about="http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein"> <span property="foaf:name" datatype="">Albert <strong>Einstein</strong></span> (b. March 14, 1879, d. April 18, 1955) was a German-born theoretical physicist. </p>
Although the rendering of this page has highlighted the term the user searched for, setting @datatype to nothing ensures that the data is interpreted as a plain literal, giving the following triples:
<http://dbpedia.org/resource/Albert_Einstein>
foaf:name
"Albert
Einstein"
.
Note that the value of this XML Literal is the exclusive canonicalization [ XML-EXC-C14N ] of the RDFa element's value.
Although the RDFa processing model requires visiting each element in the tree, if the processor meets an XML literal then it must not process any further down the tree. This is to prevent triples being generated from markup that is not actually in the hierarchy. For example, we might want to set the title of something to some markup that itself includes RDFa:
<h2 property="dc:title"> Example 3: <span about="#bbq" typeof="cal:Vevent">...</span> </h2>
In this example the nested RDFa should not be parsed. This effectively means that the presence of @property without @content will inhibit any further processing, so authors should watch out for stray attributes, especially if they find that they are getting fewer triples than they had expected.
Most of the rules governing the processing of objects that are resources are to be found in the processing descriptions given above, since they are important for establishing the subject. This section aims to highlight general concepts, and anything that might have been missed.
One or more URI object s are needed when @rel or @rev is present. Each attribute will cause triples to be generated when used with @href , @resource or @src , or with the subject value of any nested statement if none of these attributes are present.
@rel and @rev are essentially the inverse of each other; whilst @rel establishes a relationship between the current subject as subject, and the current object resource as the object, @rev does the exact opposite, and uses the current object resource as the subject, and the current subject as the object.
RDFa provides the @resource attribute as a way to set the object of statements. This is particularly useful when referring to resources that are not themselves navigable links:
<html> <head> <title>On Crime and Punishment</title> <base href="http://www.example.com/candp.xhtml" /> </head> <body> <blockquote about="#q1" rel="dc:source" resource="urn:ISBN:0140449132" > <p id="q1"> Rodion Romanovitch! My dear friend! If you go on in this way you will go mad, I am positive! Drink, pray, if only a few drops! </p> </blockquote> </body> </html>
The
blockquote
element
generates
the
following
triple:
<http://www.example.com/candp.xhtml#q1> <http://purl.org/dc/terms/source> <urn:ISBN:0140449132> .
If no @resource is present, then @href is next in priority order, for setting the object.
When a predicate has been expressed using @rel , the @href on the [RDFa statement]'s element is used to identify the object with a [URI reference]. Its type is a URI:
<link about="mailto:john@example.org" rel="foaf:knows" href="mailto:sue@example.org" />
It's also possible to use both @rel and @rev at the same time on an element. This is particularly useful when two things stand in two different relationships with each other, for example when a picture is taken by Mark, but that picture also depicts him:
<img src="photo1.jpg" rel="dc:creator" rev="foaf:img" href="http://www.blogger.com/profile/1109404" />
which then yields two triples:
<photo1.jpg> dc:creator <http://www.blogger.com/profile/1109404> . <http://www.blogger.com/profile/1109404> foaf:img <photo1.jpg> .
When a triple predicate has been expressed using @rel or @rev , but no @href , @src , or @resource exists on the same element, there is a 'hanging rel'. This causes the current subject and all possible predicates (with an indicator of whether they are 'forwards, i.e., @rel values, or not, i.e., @rev values), to be stored as 'incomplete triples' pending discovery of a subject that could be used to 'complete' those triples.
This process is described in more detail in Completing 'Incomplete Triples' .
RDFa
Profiles
are
optional
external
documents
that
define
collections
of
terms
and/or
prefix
mappings.
These
documents
must
be
defined
in
an
approved
RDFa
Host
Language
(currently
XHTML+RDFa
[
XHTML-RDFA
]).
They
may
also
be
defined
in
other
RDF
serializations
as
well
(e.g.,
RDF/XML
[
RDF-SYNTAX-GRAMMAR
]
or
Turtle
[
TURTLE
]).
RDFa
Profiles
are
referenced
via
@profile
,
and
can
be
used
by
document
authors
to
simplify
the
task
of
adding
semantic
markup.
When
an
RDFa
document
includes
@profile
,
the
value
of
the
attribute
is
evaluated
in
order.
For
each
URI
in
the
value,
do
the
following:
value
is
processed
as
follows:
rdfa:prefix
and
an
rdfa:uri
predicate,
create
a
mapping
from
the
object
literal
of
the
rdfa:prefix
predicate
to
the
object
literal
of
the
rdfa:uri
predicate.
Add
or
update
this
mapping
in
the
local
list
of
URI
mappings
after
transforming
the
'prefix'
component
to
lower-case.
rdfa:term
and
an
rdfa:uri
predicate,
create
a
mapping
from
the
object
literal
of
the
rdfa:term
predicate
to
the
object
literal
of
the
rdfa:uri
predicate.
Add
or
update
this
mapping
in
the
local
term
mappings
.
rdfa:vocabulary
,
update
the
default
vocabulary
to
be
the
object
literal
of
the
rdfa:vocabulary
predicate.
Once all the URIs in the @profile value have been processed, continue with the normal processing of the current element .
If any conflict arises between two RDFa Profiles associated with URIs in the @profile value, the declaration from the RDFa Profile associated with the left-most URI takes precedence.
It is possible that a referenced RDFa document will in turn reference other documents via @profile . Regardless of the depth to which such references might go, only the triples in the top level document effect current processing.
RDFa Processor developers are permitted and encouraged to cache the relevant triples retrieved via this mechanism, including embedding definitions for well known vocabularies in the implementation if appropriate.
The
object
literal
for
the
rdfa:uri
predicate
must
be
an
absolute
URI.
The
object
literal
for
the
rdfa:term
predicate
must
match
the
production
for
term
.
The
object
literal
for
the
rdfa:prefix
predicate
must
match
the
production
for
prefix
.
The
object
literal
for
the
rdfa:vocabulary
predicate
must
be
an
absolute
URI.
If
one
of
the
objects
is
not
a
Literal
Literal,
does
not
match
its
associated
production,
if
there
is
more
than
one
rdfa:vocabulary
predicate,
or
if
there
are
additional
rdfa:uri
or
rdfa:term
predicates
sharing
the
same
subject,
no
mapping
is
created.
an
RDFa
Processor
must
not
update
the
associated
mapping.
In
order
to
facilitate
the
use
of
CURIEs
in
markup
languages,
this
specification
defines
some
additional
datatypes
in
the
XHTML
datatype
space
(
http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/datatypes/
).
Markup
languages
that
want
to
import
these
definitions
can
find
them
in
the
"datatypes"
file
for
their
schema
grammar:
Specifically, the following datatypes are defined:
This section is non-normative.
The following informative XML Schema definition for these datatypes is included as an example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <xs:schema xmlns:xs="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/datatypes/" xmlns:xh11d="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/datatypes/" targetNamespace="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/datatypes/" elementFormDefault="qualified" > <xs:simpleType name="CURIE"> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:pattern value="(([\i-[:]][\c-[:]]*)?:)?.+" /> <xs:minLength value="1"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="CURIEs"> <xs:list itemType="xh11d:CURIE"/> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="SafeCURIE"> <xs:restriction base="xs:string"> <xs:pattern value="\[(([\i-[:]][\c-[:]]*)?:)?.+\]" /> <xs:minLength value="3"/> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="SafeCURIEs"> <xs:list itemType="xh11d:SafeCURIE"/> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="TERM"> <xs:list itemType="xs:NCName"/> <xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="CURIEorURI"> <xs:union memberTypes="xh11d:CURIE xs:anyURI" /> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="CURIEorURIs"> <xs:list itemType="xh11d:CURIEorURI"/> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="SafeCURIEorCURIEorURI"> <xs:union memberTypes="xh11d:SafeCURIE xh11d:CURIE xs:anyURI" /> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="SafeCURIEorCURIEorURIs"> <xs:list itemType="xh11d:SafeCURIEorCURIEorURI"/> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name='AbsURI'> <xs:restriction base='xs:string'> <xs:pattern value="[\i-[:]][\c-[:]]+:.+" /> </xs:restriction> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="TERMorCURIEorAbsURI"> <xs:union memberTypes="xh11d:TERM xh11d:CURIE xh11d:AbsURI" /> </xs:simpleType> <xs:simpleType name="TERMorCURIEorAbsURIs"> <xs:list itemType="xh11d:SafeCURIEorCURIEorAbsURI"/> </xs:simpleType> </xs:schema>
This section is non-normative.
The following informative XML DTD definition for these datatypes is included as an example:
<!ENTITY % CURIE.datatype "CDATA" > <!ENTITY % CURIEs.datatype "CDATA" > <!ENTITY % CURIEorURI.datatype "CDATA" > <!ENTITY % CURIEorURIs.datatype "CDATA" > <!ENTITY % SafeCURIEorCURIEorURI.datatype "CDATA" > <!ENTITY % SafeCURIEorCURIEorURIs.datatype "CDATA" ><!ENTITY % TERMorCURIEorURI.datatype "CDATA" ><!ENTITY % TERMorCURIEorAbsURI.datatype "CDATA" > <!ENTITY %TERMorCURIEorURIs.datatypeTERMorCURIEorAbsURIs.datatype "CDATA" >
The
RDFa
Term
Assignment
Vocabulary
is
used
to
modify
RDFa
processing
behavior.
behavior
and
to
define
the
terms
usable
in
the
processor
graph
.
Its
URI
is
http://www.w3.org/ns/rdfa#
.
The Vocabulary includes the following term definitions (shown here in Turtle [ TURTLE ] format):
@prefix dc: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/> . @prefix dist: <http://www.w3.org/2007/08/pyRdfa/distiller#> . @prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> . @prefix owl: <http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#> . @prefix rdf: <http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#> . @prefix rdfa: <http://www.w3.org/ns/rdfa#> .@prefix rdfs: <http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#> . @prefix xhv: <http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/vocab#> . @prefix xml: <http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace> . @prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#> .rdfa:VocabularyMapping a rdfs:Class .rdfa:PrefixMapping a rdfs:Class; rdfs:subClassOf rdfa:VocabularyMapping . rdfa:TermMapping a rdfs:Class ; rdfs:subClassOf rdfa:VocabularyMapping .rdfa:PrefixMapping a rdfs:Class ; dc:description "used in conjunction with the definition of prefixes as the domain of the rdfa:prefix property"@en ; rdfs:subClassOf rdfa:VocabularyMapping .[] a owl:AllDisjointClasses ; owl:members ( rdfa:PrefixMapping rdfa:TermMapping ) .rdfa:TermMapping a rdfs:Class ; dc:description "used in conjunction with the definition of terms as the domain of the rdfa:term property"@en ; rdfs:subClassOf rdfa:VocabularyMapping .rdfa:uri a rdf:Property, owl:FunctionalProperty, owl:DatatypeProperty ; rdfs:range xsd:anyURI ; rdfs:domain rdfa:VocabularyMapping . rdfa:prefix a rdf:Property, owl:FunctionalProperty, owl:DatatypeProperty ; rdfs:range xsd:NMTOKEN ; rdfs:domain rdfa:PrefixMapping .rdfa:VocabularyMapping a rdfs:Class .rdfa:term a rdf:Property, owl:FunctionalProperty, owl:DatatypeProperty ; rdfs:range xsd:NMTOKEN ; rdfs:domain rdfa:TermMapping .<http://www.w3.org/ns/rdfa#> a owl:Ontology ; dc:creator <http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf#me> ; dc:date "2010-07-23"@en ; dc:description "This document describes the RDFa Vocabulary for Term and Prefix Assignment. The Vocabulary is used to modify RDFa1.1 processing behavior."@en ; dc:title "RDFa Vocabulary for Term and Prefix Assignment"@en ; rdfs:isDefinedBy <http://www.w3.org/TR/rdfa-core/> ; rdfs:seeAlso <http://www.w3.org/TR/rdfa-core/> ; owl:versionInfo "$Date: 2010/08/02 17:18:12 $"@en . rdfa:prefix a rdf:Property, owl:DatatypeProperty, owl:FunctionalProperty ; dc:description "defines a prefix"@en ; rdfs:domain rdfa:PrefixMapping ; rdfs:range xsd:NMTOKEN . rdfa:term a rdf:Property, owl:DatatypeProperty, owl:FunctionalProperty ; dc:description "defines a term"@en ; rdfs:domain rdfa:TermMapping ; rdfs:range xsd:NMTOKEN . rdfa:uri a rdf:Property, owl:DatatypeProperty, owl:FunctionalProperty ; dc:description "defines a uri string to be used either with a term or a prefix definition"@en ; rdfs:domain rdfa:VocabularyMapping ; rdfs:range xsd:anyURI . rdfa:vocabulary a rdf:Property, owl:DatatypeProperty ; dc:description "defines a uri string to be used as a default vocabulary"@en ; rdfs:range xsd:anyURI . <http://www.w3.org/ns/rdfa.html> xhv:stylesheet <http://www.w3.org/StyleSheets/TR/base.css> . <http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf#me> a foaf:Person ; rdfs:seeAlso <http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf> ; foaf:mbox <mailto:ivan@w3.org> ; foaf:name "Ivan Herman"@en ; foaf:title "Semantic Web Activity Lead"@en ; foaf:workplaceHomepage <http://www.w3.org> . [ a owl:AllDisjointClasses ; owl:members ( rdfa:PrefixMapping rdfa:TermMapping )].
This vocabulary is also available in an separate file in Turtle format and in RDF/XML format .
These predicates can be used to 'pair' URI strings and their usage in the form of a prefix and/or a term as part of, for example, a blank node. An example can be as follows:
[] rdfa:uri "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name" ; rdfa:prefix "foaf" .
which defines a prefix for the foaf URI.
This section is non-normative.
2010p>2010-02-25:
2010-07-26:
Added
the
'vocabulary'
term
to
the
RDFa
Profile
handling.
2010-02-25: Split into RDFa Core and XHTML+RDFa.
2010-01-01: Applied changes to start production of version 1.1. This includes the re-integration of datatype CURIEorURI.
This section is non-normative.
At the time of publication, the members of the RDFa Working Group were: