- From: Bijan Parsia <bparsia@cs.man.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 13 May 2008 17:26:31 +0200
- To: Dan Connolly <connolly@w3.org>
- Cc: Harry Halpin <hhalpin@ibiblio.org>, public-grddl-comments@w3.org, Chimezie Ogbuji <ogbujic@ccf.org>, public-grddl-wg@w3.org
On May 13, 2008, at 4:21 PM, Dan Connolly wrote: > On Tue, 2008-05-13 at 19:54 +0100, Harry Halpin wrote: > [...] >> Your argument is that the CR report specifies the function >> abstractly. >> I'm pretty sure the GRDDL WG was not thinking of non-executable >> functions when developing GRDDL. I would like to here other >> opinions of >> whether or not a GRDDL transformation has to be "executable." > > A prose specification of a transformation function is just as > much a representation of a transformation function as an XSLT > document. Great. > But... > >> My personal opinion is that I am not sure what the utility of it >> is if >> it can't be executable, > > exactly, My perspective on the utility of GRDDL agents is *that they support transformations*, not that they *support trasnformations by downloading XSLT from the Web*. A particular GRDDL agent that doesn't support OWL/XML is, in that configuration, less useful (to me) than a GRDDL agent that does (or is configured to). That's fine. The utility of a *specification* of the GRDDL transformation is that it tells GRDDL agent authors and users what the canonical transformation should be. If you like XSLT for specification, then I would say, Great, so put a pdf of your XSLT at the namespace document. (Again, I'm trying to distinguish implementation and specification. If specification is valuable, I tend to think it's valuable independent of whether that specification is implementable.) > as prose isn't a "widely-supported format"... It's far more widely supported than XSLT. It's just not executable. For executable formats, Javascript does *far* more DOM transforms client side (albeit not in GRDDL agents) than XSLT. > "Developers of transformations should make available > representations in > widely-supported formats. XSLT version 1[XSLT1] is the format most > widely supported by GRDDL-aware agents as of this writing ... ." > -- http://www.w3.org/TR/grddl Since, in part, we're discussing how GRDDL agents should work, I fail to see that this is apropos. CHeers, Bijan.
Received on Tuesday, 13 May 2008 15:27:26 UTC