- From: Pierre-Antoine Champin <pierre-antoine@w3.org>
- Date: Thu, 23 Nov 2023 19:20:04 +0100
- To: Vincent Emonet <vincent.emonet@gmail.com>, Semantic Web <semantic-web@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <72c1313d-3ccb-4104-b5a5-2d30ffe90481@w3.org>
On 23/11/2023 15:42, Vincent Emonet wrote: > (...) > From my point of view: > - A minimal modern validator should at least enable users to provide > RDF in various format (the classic xml, turtle, trig, n3, nquads, > ntriples, ideally it could even support JSON-LD). > - And it should enable users to convert from any formats to any other > format (if you can do parsing, you can also do serializing, so why not > doing both?) > - Ideally it should be implemented to work fully on the client > (because decentralization, and scalability, and we have now good > JS/wasm options to parse in the browser now), so that it can be > deployed to any CDN without the cost of hosting a server. If people > needs an API we can find a way to setup a client-side API (look like > an API, query like an API, but execution on the client) you mean, something like that ? :-) (disclaimer: this is a very rough and early prototype) The reason I asked the 2nd point was precisely to determine whether this prototype could be a satisfactory replacement from the current ageing validator. > > > Best, > > Vincent > > > Le mer. 22 nov. 2023 à 13:46, <hans..teijgeler@quicknet.nl > <mailto:hans.teijgeler@quicknet.nl>> a écrit : > > Hi Pierre-Antoine, > > I use the IDLab Turtle Validator <http://ttl.summerofcode.be/> > > Regards, Hans >
Attachments
- application/pgp-keys attachment: OpenPGP public key
Received on Thursday, 23 November 2023 18:20:08 UTC