- From: Chuck Foster <chuck@pipex.net>
- Date: Wed, 11 Oct 1995 00:34:41 +0000
- To: html-wg@oclc.org, www-html@w3.org
Hi, I keep on confusing myself over the meaning of the REL and REV parts of the LINK element. I have been using the following form for a while, which I worked out from the specs some time earlier in the year, before HTML3: <link href="mailto:chuck@pipex.net" rev=owns,made> which I assumed means that the href quoted is for the URL of who "owns" and "made" the document, this being a REV as the URL is related to this document, not this document relating to that. Reference: http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/html3/dochead.html REL This defines the relationship defined by the link. REV This defines a reverse relationship. A link from document A to document B with REV=relation expresses the same relationship as a link from B to A with REL=relation. REV=made is sometimes used to identify the document author, either the author's email address with a mailto URI, or a link to the author's home page. Now it then follows on with examples such as REL=Home The link references a home page or the top of some hierarchy. My interpretation of the above rules makes me read this as meaning that *this* document is the Home for the one pointed to by the URL, not the way the example says (I would have used REV to indicate that the URL is the home page to this document). Could someone please explain is I am just misunderstanding the relationships, or if the spec is ambiguous or just plain wrong!!! I want to get it right in my own head before passing it onto others and leading them astray if I am wrong here. Thanks Chuck
Received on Tuesday, 10 October 1995 19:34:59 UTC