If the movie and the director are both fictional, then schema:fictional=true could be assigned to both separately. The relationship between them would be schema:director (which doesn’t need to be tagged as “fictional”).
The fact that a fictional movie might happen to be schema:genre=”Science fiction” is merely a coincidence.
Jeff
From: Thad Guidry [mailto:thadguidry@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2014 3:23 PM
To: Young,Jeff (OR)
Cc: chaals@yandex-team.ru; Dan Scott; Dan Brickley; Peter F.Patel-Schneider; Wallis,Richard; martin.hepp@ebusiness-unibw.org; Karen Coyle; <public-vocabs@w3.org>
Subject: Re: Person and fictional Re: VideoGame proposal
Jeff... ok...
Is this...
schema:fictional false; # to be pedantic about it
A property to be used on ANY Schema.org Type ? How would it work against say...
<div itemscope itemtype ="http://schema.org/Movie">
<h1 itemprop="name">Avatar</h1>
<span>Director: <span itemprop="director">James Cameron</span> (born August 16, 1954)</span>
<span itemprop="genre">Science fiction</span>
<a href="../movies/avatar-theatrical-trailer.html" itemprop="trailer">Trailer</a>
</div>
What would the changes needed look like on the code above , if both itemtype="http://schema.org/Movie" and itemprop="director" were both Fictional ?
--
-Thad
+ThadGuidry<https://www.google.com/+ThadGuidry>
Thad on LinkedIn<http://www.linkedin.com/in/thadguidry/>
On Mon, Oct 20, 2014 at 10:58 AM, Young,Jeff (OR) <jyoung@oclc.org<mailto:jyoung@oclc.org>> wrote:
Here’s how I imagine splitting the hair:
_:A0
a schema:Book;
schema:name “Anna Karenina”;
schema:fictional false; # to be pedantic about it
schema:about _:A1;
schema:genre “Fiction”;
.
_:A1
a schema:Person;
schema:fictional true;
schema:name “Anna Karenina”;
.