microformats2-json: Difference between revisions
(→rel-urls Object: Finish this up) |
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* [https://gist.github.com/Zegnat/65ed9a9fb0546fb8c4aa0c0b790b8a40 JSON Schema for microformats2 objects], by [https://vanderven.se/martijn/ Martijn van der Ven] | * [https://gist.github.com/Zegnat/65ed9a9fb0546fb8c4aa0c0b790b8a40 JSON Schema for microformats2 objects], by [https://vanderven.se/martijn/ Martijn van der Ven] | ||
* [https://github.com/cleverdevil/microformats2 Type- and vocabulary-aware microformats2 JSON validator in Python], by [https://cleverdevil.io/ Jonathan LaCour] | * [https://github.com/cleverdevil/microformats2 Type- and vocabulary-aware microformats2 JSON validator in Python], by [https://cleverdevil.io/ Jonathan LaCour] | ||
Revision as of 09:40, 24 April 2018
microformats2 JSON is the canonical output format of the microformats2 parsing algorithm. As such it can be used to compare parsers and create test suites. It is also used as the official serialisation format of microformats objects, and relied upon by specifications such as Micropub.
Parsed Document Format
Parsers collect not only microformats2 objects, but also link relationships. Parsing an entire document will result in an outer object with 3 members named items
, rels
, and rel-urls
:
{
"items": [],
"rels": {},
"rel-urls": {}
}
items
is an array of microformats2 objects, ordered according to their order in the source document.rels
is an object where the member names reflect allrel
-values found in the source document.rel-urls
is an object where the member names reflect all URLs found in the source document withrel
-values attached.
microformat2 Objects
The microformats2 object is an object with 2 required members named type
and properties
, as well as an optional member named children
:
{
"type": [],
"properties": {},
"children": []
}
type
is an array of the types that identify the microformat, ordered alphabetically.properties
is an object where the member names reflect all properties found for the microformat.- The optional member
children
is an array of other microformats2 objects that were found nested in the current one.
type
The type
member contains an alphabetically sorted array of root class names. These names express what the microformat is expressing, and are often coupled to which properties to expect through documented conventions.
The root class names are individual strings that match the pattern h-([0-9a-z]+-)?[a-z]+
.
The following example shows an h-entry
type microformats2 object, with a single property attached. The h-entry
type is documented on the wiki, this way types point towards documented conventions that hold true no matter what the source document was.
{
"type": ["h-entry"],
"properties": {
"summary": ["A short published note."]
}
}
properties
The properties
member contains an object where every member name is a microformats2 property name, and every member value is an array of the found microformats2 values. Even when only one value is given, it will be inside an array.
Valid values in the value array are one of the following:
- a string value, the most common value,
- an embedded markup object, containing both a plain string value and the verbatim mark-up from the source document, or
- another microformat2 object.
If a microformat2 object is used as the value of a property, it will gain the additional member value
to express a plain string representation. If a consuming application does not understand the nested microformat2 object, it can opt to treat it as that string.
If a microformat2 object is used as the value of a property, when the parser is also instructed to return it as an embedded markup object, it will gain the additional member html
.
The following example shows an h-entry
type microformats2 object, with 3 properties to show the 3 different types of properties. The name
is a single string, the content
contains verbatim HTML from the source document, and the author
is a nested microformat2 h-card
object. The in-reply-to
property has been added to show how one property may contain multiple valid values.
To see what these properties mean in the context of an h-entry
type, see the Core Properties section on the type’s wiki page.
{
"type": ["h-entry"],
"properties": {
"name": ["An example entry"],
"content": [
{
"html": "<p>Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut. Dicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur.</p>\n<p>Consequuntur repellat sed aut in et dolores. Consequatur amet quo enim.</p>",
"value": "Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut. Dicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur.\nConsequuntur repellat sed aut in et dolores. Consequatur amet quo enim."
}
],
"author": [
{
"type": ["h-card"],
"properties": {
"name": ["Mx Example"],
"url": ["https://example.com/"]
},
"value": "Mx Example"
}
],
"in-reply-to": [
{
"type": ["h-cite"],
"properties": {
"name": ["Example Domain"],
"author": ["IANA"],
"url": ["https://example.org/"]
},
"value": "https://example.org/"
},
"https://example.net/"
]
}
}
children
The optional children
member is added when nested microformats are found and contains an array of microformat2 objects.
This happens when other objects are contained with outer ones, e.g. data is marked up with microformats within the content of an h-entry
. Another possibility is that the outer object exists to group all its nested objects, such as an h-feed
.
The following example shows an h-feed
type microformats2 object with a few properties that describe the feed, and an array of h-entry
objects as its children.
{
"type": ["h-feed"],
"properties": {
"author": ["https://example.org/"],
"name": ["Example Feed"]
},
"children": [
{
"type": ["h-entry"],
"properties": {
"name": ["Entry 1"],
"content": [
{
"html": "<p>Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut.</p>\n<p>Dicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur.</p>",
"value": "Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut.\nDicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur."
}
]
}
},
{
"type": ["h-entry"],
"properties": {
"name": ["Entry 2"],
"content": [
{
"html": "<p>Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut.</p>\n<p>Dicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur.</p>",
"value": "Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut.\nDicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur."
}
]
}
},
{
"type": ["h-entry"],
"properties": {
"name": ["Entry 3"],
"content": [
{
"html": "<p>Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut.</p>\n<p>Dicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur.</p>",
"value": "Ut non sit saepe porro porro est aut.\nDicta ut repellat quisquam repellendus et iste consequatur."
}
]
}
}
]
}
rels Object
The rels object is an object with any amount of members, where every member name is a link relationship (see the documented existing relationships for examples) and every member value is an array of URLs.
Any relationship can have 1 or more URLs in its matching array. And any URL can be in several arrays, if it has several relationships associated with it.
The following example shows a rels object where 4 URLs were found in the source document:
https://example.com/
identifies the homepage using thehome
relationship value,https://example.com/fr/
identifies an alternative version of the home page, combining thehome
andalternate
relationship values,https://example.com/a
andhttps://example.com/b
both identify an author of the current page using theauthor
relationship value.
{
"home": [
"https://example.com/",
"https://example.com/fr/"
],
"author": [
"https://example.com/a",
"https://example.com/b"
],
"alternate": ["https://example.com/fr/"]
}
rel-urls Object
The rel-urls object is an object with any amount of members, where every member name is a URL and every member value is an object.
The value object will always contain a member with the name rels
. That member’s value will be an array of alphabeticall sorted link relationships applicable to the URL.
The value object may additionally contain any members with the following names:
hreflang
media
title
type
The values of these members are always a single string. The value is taken from the link’s attribute in the source document matching the member name. E.g. in HTML the value of an <a>
element’s hreflang
attribute will be the value of the URL’s hreflang
member in the rel-urls object.
In addition the optional member named text
is added if any text is associated with the URL in the source document. E.g. in HTML the text within an <a>
element will be used.
The following example shows what the companion rel-urls object to the above rels object might look like. It shows the text that was used to link to the authors, giving us more context of who they are. It also makes clear that the alternative version of the home page is in fact in French and meant for handheld devices.
{
"https://example.com/": {
"rels": ["home"],
"text": "Example Homepage"
},
"https://example.com/a": {
"rels": ["author"],
"text": "Mx Adam"
},
"https://example.com/b": {
"rels": ["author"],
"text": "Mx Baker"
},
"https://example.com/fr/": {
"rels": ["alternate", "home"],
"hreflang": "fr",
"media": "handheld",
"text": "Example page d’accueil"
}
}
The rel-urls object was a later addition to the specification. It exists because so much information was lost when only the rels object was created. The discussion that shaped it can be read on the brainstorming page.