Re: Multi-typed Entities in schema.org; was: Re: makesOffer should accept Service

I'll do my best not to let you down Dan, thanks for pointing the way.


On Wed, Jan 8, 2014 at 8:14 PM, Dan Brickley <danbri@google.com> wrote:

> On 8 January 2014 18:15, Jarno van Driel <jarno@quantumspork.nl> wrote:
> > Excuse me for being the noob here ;) but how could I literally help out?
> I'm
> > willing but unfortunately unfamiliar with what I could on the webschemas
> > wiki nor how to do it. If somebody could point me the way and hold my
> hand a
> > bit so to say, than I'm more than happy to dedicate some of my time to
> code
> > a bunch of examples. I just don't know where and how to start.
>
> Sure. Step 1., get a W3C Account.
>
> a) if you work for  a member organization, find out who your W3C
> 'advisory committee' rep is, and do it through then
> or
> b) members of the public can also get W3C accounts, see under
> http://www.w3.org/wiki/WebSchemas#Introduction "To edit this wiki,
> you'll need a W3C account; these are available to all"
> -> https://www.w3.org/accounts/request has details on the process (it
> might take a few hours, and some checking for mail response etc.).
>
> Step 2., create some markup examples. For this you'll need some
> passing familiarity with MediaWiki. There are a few ways we could do
> this. Markup inline in a Wiki page, or links to files elsewhere (e.g.
> W3C mercurial repository --- yet more tooling to learn, github,
> external URLs etc.).
>
> W3C's installation of MediaWiki has a useful addon for markup
> examples, here's a quick sample:
>
> <syntaxhighlight lang="html4strict" line start="1" highlight="2,3">
>  <div itemscope="" itemtype="http://schema.org/SoftwareApplication">
>     <p itemprop="operatingSystems">OSX 10.6</p>,
>     <p itemprop="operatingSystems">Windows 7</p>
>  ...
>  </div>
> </syntaxhighlight>
>
> I have made a super-quick example page here, just to get started:
> http://www.w3.org/wiki/WebSchemas/MultipleTypesSDO
>
> Feel free to add inline linked examples, attachments, links to github,
> gist, mercurial, ... whatever is easiest.
>
> Hope that helps,
>
> Dan
>

Received on Wednesday, 8 January 2014 19:34:26 UTC