- From: Paul Prescod <papresco@calum.csclub.uwaterloo.ca>
- Date: Sat, 08 Mar 1997 22:24:41 -0500
- To: www-html <www-html@w3.org>, www-international <www-international@w3.org>
Misha Wolf wrote: > A similar problem arises with the use of Metadata. At the DC-4 Metadata > Workshop in Canberra (March 3-5), we agonised over a difficult choice: > > 1. Use a clean syntax for "qualified" (explained below) Metadata, even > though it would rely on a use of attributes not defined in HTML 2.0/3.2. > > 2. Use a dirty (difficult to parse) syntax, conformant with HTML 2.0/3.2. The latter approach to meta-data seems doomed to failure in the long run. Metadata can have structure. Metadata can nest. Metadata can even recurse. Metadata structure should be validatable. Lobbying W3C and the browser vendors to support each metadata idea you come up with is going to be a painful process. Even your "qualified" metadata seems "dirty" to me, in the sense of difficult to parse. Wouldn't this be better: <META-BLOCK LANG="Swahili" SCHEME="XYZ" SYSTEM="DC"> <SUBJECT>...</SUBJECT> <DATE DAY=03 MONTH=02 YEAR=1997> </META-BLOCK> <META-BLOCK LANG="French" SCHEME="QRS" SYSTEM="TEI"> <FILEDESC>...</FILEDESC> .... </META-BLOCK> I propose, instead of lobbying for a *particular* extension to metadata today, and another particular extension next year, and another particular extension the year after that, you should just lobby for the right to <LINK> to MetaData which can then be an XML document broken into META-BLOCKs where each META-BLOCK has arbitrarily complex XML structure. Paul Prescod
Received on Saturday, 8 March 1997 22:20:04 UTC