- From: Sam Ruby <rubys@intertwingly.net>
- Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2009 20:17:21 -0500
- To: Julian Reschke <julian.reschke@gmx.de>
- CC: Ben Adida <ben@adida.net>, noah_mendelsohn@us.ibm.com, Henri Sivonen <hsivonen@iki.fi>, Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>, HTMLWG WG <public-html@w3.org>, RDFa mailing list <public-rdf-in-xhtml-tf@w3.org>, public-xhtml2@w3.org, "www-tag@w3.org WG" <www-tag@w3.org>
Julian Reschke wrote: > Ben Adida wrote: >> Julian Reschke wrote: >>>> how @rel is interpreted. You can't interpret @rel blindfolded. >>> But I'd like to. >> >> I don't think RDFa is the technology that's stopping you here. The >> existing state of the web and HTML is already preventing it. >> >>> WRT profile; I see how this can work for a single profile URI, but it >>> does not scale, so I'm not sure how this is supposed to help with mixing >>> relations from several profiles (namespaces) in a single document. >> >> Far be it from me to defend the @profile approach to web-scale data :) >> But, to be fair, @profile does allow for a space-separated list of >> values. > > Yes, but how does this help in this case? > > If I have > > <head profile="http://example.com/ http://example.org/"> > > and > > <a rel="foobar"> > > ...how do I find out which profile/namespace foobar belongs to? It > doesn't solve the disambiguation problem. I'll also mention that fragments of [X]HTML often appear in places like XMPP and Atom. Places where a <head> element generally don't appear. A typical content management system like WordPress, templating languages like PHP, and even lowly Planet aggregating software often are faced with the problem of collating multiple fragments and placing them on a single page. We are not talking about obscure tags here, we are talking about attributes that may be found on the <a> tag. - Sam Ruby
Received on Saturday, 28 February 2009 01:18:44 UTC