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<h1> Datatypes in HTML </h1> | |||
One of the challenges of using HTML as a data transport is that everything, by default, is a string. This page explores ways to use microformats -- specifically, class names -- to encode data type information, e.g., for use with [[xoxo]] and [[rest/ahah]], in order to allow lossless import/export from various languages. | One of the challenges of using HTML as a data transport is that everything, by default, is a string. This page explores ways to use microformats -- specifically, class names -- to encode data type information, e.g., for use with [[xoxo]] and [[rest/ahah]], in order to allow lossless import/export from various languages. These could also be used with forms to provide [[rest/description]]s of the type of data expected. | ||
__TOC__ | |||
== Contributors == | |||
* Dr. Ernie Prabhakar | |||
* Chris RG | |||
* Mark Rickerby | |||
* Robert Bachmann | |||
* Kevin Marks | |||
* Tantek Çelik | |||
== Examples == | == Examples == | ||
Line 30: | Line 40: | ||
|- | |- | ||
! [http://www.sysprog.net/ctype.html C] | ! [http://www.sysprog.net/ctype.html C] | ||
| char | | char[] || float, double || int, long, short || bool, int || char[] || N/A || (void*)0 | ||
|- | |- | ||
! [http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/datatypes.html Java] | ! [http://java.sun.com/docs/books/tutorial/java/nutsandbolts/datatypes.html Java] | ||
| char, String || float, double || int, long, short, byte || boolean || N/A || util.Date || | | char, String || float, double || int, long, short, byte || boolean || N/A || util.Date || null | ||
|- | |- | ||
! [http://www.zend.com/manual/language.types.php PHP] | ! [http://www.zend.com/manual/language.types.php PHP] | ||
Line 45: | Line 55: | ||
|- | |- | ||
! [http://www.rubycentral.com/book/ext_ruby.html Ruby] + [http://www.rubycentral.com/book/lib_standard.html lib] | ! [http://www.rubycentral.com/book/ext_ruby.html Ruby] + [http://www.rubycentral.com/book/lib_standard.html lib] | ||
| String || Float || Fixnum, Bignum || TrueClass,FalseClass || | | String || Float || Fixnum, Bignum || TrueClass,FalseClass || Hash || Date || NilClass | ||
|- | |||
! [http://www.rebol.com/docs/core23/rebolcore-16.html REBOL] | |||
| string! || decimal! || integer! || logic! || binary! || date!, time! || none! | |||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
== | == Analysis == | ||
The most common set of datatypes appears to be those represented by XML-RPC, which (perhaps fortunately) also has historical precedence on the web: | |||
* string | |||
* double | |||
* int [i4] - 4-byte integer (32-bit) | |||
* boolean (0,1) | |||
* base64 | |||
** Lets call this 'binary' as the encoding is in the data: url, and DRY applies | |||
** RFC 2426 uses "B", which, when lowercased per microformats [[naming-principles]] is 'b'. -Tantek | |||
* dateTime[.iso8601] | |||
While not perfect, these certainly cover the 80% case, and are reasonably well-defined. That said, there are a number of open questions about how to use them: | |||
# should 'string' also be explicitly specified, or can it be assumed? | |||
#*Assumed, and also defined as utf-8. [[User:Kevin Marks|Kevin Marks]] 16:39, 13 Feb 2006 (PST) | |||
#*Agreed with Kevin. 'string' should be the default if no type is specified. Publishers MAY explicitly specify 'string'. - Tantek | |||
#*Shouldn't the encoding be that of the page the markup is found on (as specified in the HTTP and HTML specs), rather than defined as utf-8? [[User:Jim Ancona|Jim Ancona]] | |||
#*Jim, that's a good point, the encoding should be determined by the rules of the containing document ((X)HTML) and protocol (HTTP). - Tantek | |||
# does 'int' always mean 32-bits? | |||
## If so, what should be used for 64-bit integers or cryptographic (256-bit+) numbers? | |||
###Python's 'long' is simple, but ambiguous. | |||
###Ruby's BigNum is clear but much less common. | |||
###XML-Schema has so many types it is hard to say. | |||
###* In this case, XML-Schema makes the distinction that 'int' represents a standard 32 bit integer, while 'integer' represents a signed integer of arbitrary length. | |||
###SQL's "decimal", perhaps? | |||
## If not, how should conforming implementations react to longer integers than they can handle? | |||
##*I think integer is fine - we don't have an explict constraint here. Do you want to define +Inf -Inf and NaN behavior? Certainly when building testcases and examples include these. | |||
# Is it worth deviating from the standard to allow "dateTime" as an alias? (the one case where XML Schema is actually simpler) | |||
#* See comments below regarding date-time. | |||
== Proposal == | |||
The proposal is to adopt [http://www.xmlrpc.com/spec/ XML-RPC] scalar values as the class names for typed microformats, with the following caveats: | |||
=== Integers === | |||
* the alias ''i4'' for integer SHOULD NOT be used | |||
* the name ''long'' MAY be used for 64-bit or longer integers | |||
* thus, the name ''int'' MAY be used for more than 32-bit signed integers | |||
=== Date and Time === | |||
* use ''datetime'' for ''dateTime.iso8601'' | |||
** camelCase is not appropriate according to microformat [[naming-principles]]. | |||
** '.' is neither a valid HTML class name, nor a valid character (unescaped at least) in a CSS class selector | |||
** Alternative: dt (reusing the common prefix shared by existing microformat class names: dtstart, dtend, dtreviewed from [[hcalendar|hCalendar]] and [[hreview|hReview]]. We could also make that a [http://microformats.org/wiki/naming-principles#dt_properties general rule for microformat class names for properties which take ISO8601 datetimes]. (Tantek) | |||
* date/time formats SHOULD follow the [http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-datetime W3C profile] | |||
** at any rate, they MUST follow [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601 ISO 8601] | |||
** a more human-readable rendering may be used, with the ISO8601 value in an ''abbr'' | |||
=== Binary Data === | |||
* binary data SHOULD be encoded in a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data:_URI_scheme data: URI], with an explicit [http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/special/a.html ContentType] and a human-readable description as the body of the anchor. | |||
* therefore, use ''binary'' for ''base64'', as there may be alternate, non-base64 encodings in the future | |||
=== String === | |||
* ''string'' MAY be omittted | |||
* thus, any unlabeled entries MUST be interpreted as strings. | |||
== Usage == | |||
To indicate that a particular micforomat uses typed values, precede or follow that microformat with the class name ''typed'', as in: | |||
<pre><nowiki> | |||
<ol class=''typed xoxo''> | |||
</nowiki></pre> | |||
or | |||
<pre><nowiki> | |||
<ol class=''xoxo typed''> | |||
</nowiki></pre> | |||
In other words, this defines what might be called the "<pre>typed</pre>" microformat. | |||
== Summary == | |||
* string (optional) | |||
* boolean (0,1) | |||
* int (WAS i4; MAY use long) | |||
* double | |||
* datetime (WAS dateTime.iso8601) | |||
* binary (WAS base64) | |||
* nil | |||
== | == Example == | ||
<ol class="typed xoxo"> # every XOXO must begin with ol or ul | |||
<li> | |||
<dl> | |||
<dt>key</dt><dd>value</dd> | |||
<dt>integer</dt><dd class="int">137</dd> | |||
<dt>real</dt><dd class="double">3.14159265</dd> | |||
<dt>date</dt><dd class="datetime">1994-11-05T13:15:30Z</dd> | |||
<dt>date(abbr)</dt><dd class="datetime"><abbr title="1994-11-05">November 5, 1994</abbr></dd> | |||
<dt>true</dt><dd class="boolean">1</dd> | |||
<dt>false</dt><dd class="boolean">0</dd> | |||
<dt>data</dt><dd class="binary"><a href="data:;base64,sdcfo2JTiXE=" type="image/jpg">my image</a></dd> | |||
</dl> | |||
</li> | |||
</ol> | |||
== References == | == References == | ||
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* Original [http://homepage.mac.com/drernie/plist.html plist] datatype mapping proposal | * Original [http://homepage.mac.com/drernie/plist.html plist] datatype mapping proposal | ||
* Revised [http://opendarwin.org/~drernie/xoxo-datatypes.html xoxo datatype] proposal | * Revised [http://opendarwin.org/~drernie/xoxo-datatypes.html xoxo datatype] proposal | ||
* HTML 5 [http://hsivonen.iki.fi/html5-datatypes/ datatypes] | |||
== See Also == | |||
* [[xoxo]] | |||
* [[naming-principles]] |
Latest revision as of 22:50, 31 August 2007
Datatypes in HTML
One of the challenges of using HTML as a data transport is that everything, by default, is a string. This page explores ways to use microformats -- specifically, class names -- to encode data type information, e.g., for use with xoxo and rest/ahah, in order to allow lossless import/export from various languages. These could also be used with forms to provide rest/descriptions of the type of data expected.
Contributors
- Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
- Chris RG
- Mark Rickerby
- Robert Bachmann
- Kevin Marks
- Tantek Çelik
Examples
These are the primary datatypes in a range of different languages and formats. Note that we are only concerned with "primitive" datatypes (loosely defined), as structured datatypes (list/array, hash/dictionary) are handled by xoxo.
Language/format | string | float | integer | boolean | data | date/time | null |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
XML Schema | string | float, double | decimal, integer, etc. | boolean | hexBinary, base64Binary | duration, dateTime, date, time | nil |
XML-RPC | string | double | i4, int | boolean | base64 | dateTime.iso8601 | nil |
Mac OS X plists | string | real | integer | true, false | data | date | nil |
JSON (JavaScript) | string | number | number | true, false | N/A | Date | nil |
YAML tags | str | int | float | bool | null (base 64) | N/A | null |
SQL (JDBC) | char,varchar | float, double, real | decimal, numeric | bit | binary | date, time, timestamp | ? |
C | char[] | float, double | int, long, short | bool, int | char[] | N/A | (void*)0 |
Java | char, String | float, double | int, long, short, byte | boolean | N/A | util.Date | null |
PHP | string | float (double) | integer | boolean | array | N/A | NULL |
Perl | array | scalar | scalar | scalar | array | N/A | |
Python | str | float, complex | int, long | bool | binascii, base64 | time,datetime | |
Ruby + lib | String | Float | Fixnum, Bignum | TrueClass,FalseClass | Hash | Date | NilClass |
REBOL | string! | decimal! | integer! | logic! | binary! | date!, time! | none! |
Analysis
The most common set of datatypes appears to be those represented by XML-RPC, which (perhaps fortunately) also has historical precedence on the web:
- string
- double
- int [i4] - 4-byte integer (32-bit)
- boolean (0,1)
- base64
- Lets call this 'binary' as the encoding is in the data: url, and DRY applies
- RFC 2426 uses "B", which, when lowercased per microformats naming-principles is 'b'. -Tantek
- dateTime[.iso8601]
While not perfect, these certainly cover the 80% case, and are reasonably well-defined. That said, there are a number of open questions about how to use them:
- should 'string' also be explicitly specified, or can it be assumed?
- Assumed, and also defined as utf-8. Kevin Marks 16:39, 13 Feb 2006 (PST)
- Agreed with Kevin. 'string' should be the default if no type is specified. Publishers MAY explicitly specify 'string'. - Tantek
- Shouldn't the encoding be that of the page the markup is found on (as specified in the HTTP and HTML specs), rather than defined as utf-8? Jim Ancona
- Jim, that's a good point, the encoding should be determined by the rules of the containing document ((X)HTML) and protocol (HTTP). - Tantek
- does 'int' always mean 32-bits?
- If so, what should be used for 64-bit integers or cryptographic (256-bit+) numbers?
- Python's 'long' is simple, but ambiguous.
- Ruby's BigNum is clear but much less common.
- XML-Schema has so many types it is hard to say.
- In this case, XML-Schema makes the distinction that 'int' represents a standard 32 bit integer, while 'integer' represents a signed integer of arbitrary length.
- SQL's "decimal", perhaps?
- If not, how should conforming implementations react to longer integers than they can handle?
- I think integer is fine - we don't have an explict constraint here. Do you want to define +Inf -Inf and NaN behavior? Certainly when building testcases and examples include these.
- If so, what should be used for 64-bit integers or cryptographic (256-bit+) numbers?
- Is it worth deviating from the standard to allow "dateTime" as an alias? (the one case where XML Schema is actually simpler)
- See comments below regarding date-time.
Proposal
The proposal is to adopt XML-RPC scalar values as the class names for typed microformats, with the following caveats:
Integers
- the alias i4 for integer SHOULD NOT be used
- the name long MAY be used for 64-bit or longer integers
- thus, the name int MAY be used for more than 32-bit signed integers
Date and Time
- use datetime for dateTime.iso8601
- camelCase is not appropriate according to microformat naming-principles.
- '.' is neither a valid HTML class name, nor a valid character (unescaped at least) in a CSS class selector
- Alternative: dt (reusing the common prefix shared by existing microformat class names: dtstart, dtend, dtreviewed from hCalendar and hReview. We could also make that a general rule for microformat class names for properties which take ISO8601 datetimes. (Tantek)
- date/time formats SHOULD follow the W3C profile
- at any rate, they MUST follow ISO 8601
- a more human-readable rendering may be used, with the ISO8601 value in an abbr
Binary Data
- binary data SHOULD be encoded in a data: URI, with an explicit ContentType and a human-readable description as the body of the anchor.
- therefore, use binary for base64, as there may be alternate, non-base64 encodings in the future
String
- string MAY be omittted
- thus, any unlabeled entries MUST be interpreted as strings.
Usage
To indicate that a particular micforomat uses typed values, precede or follow that microformat with the class name typed, as in:
<ol class=''typed xoxo''>
or
<ol class=''xoxo typed''>
In other words, this defines what might be called the "
typed
" microformat.
Summary
- string (optional)
- boolean (0,1)
- int (WAS i4; MAY use long)
- double
- datetime (WAS dateTime.iso8601)
- binary (WAS base64)
- nil
Example
<ol class="typed xoxo"> # every XOXO must begin with ol or ul <li> <dl> <dt>key</dt><dd>value</dd> <dt>integer</dt><dd class="int">137</dd> <dt>real</dt><dd class="double">3.14159265</dd> <dt>date</dt><dd class="datetime">1994-11-05T13:15:30Z</dd> <dt>date(abbr)</dt><dd class="datetime"><abbr title="1994-11-05">November 5, 1994</abbr></dd> <dt>true</dt><dd class="boolean">1</dd> <dt>false</dt><dd class="boolean">0</dd> <dt>data</dt><dd class="binary"><a href="data:;base64,sdcfo2JTiXE=" type="image/jpg">my image</a></dd> </dl> </li> </ol>
References
- Datatypes in Wikipedia
- Origional datatype discussion
- Original plist datatype mapping proposal
- Revised xoxo datatype proposal
- HTML 5 datatypes