h-adr: Difference between revisions
(how to markup country codes) |
(change implied must to a should for full country name, make country codes ok, describe how consuming applications may interepret country codes) |
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* '''<code>p-region</code>''' - state/county/province | * '''<code>p-region</code>''' - state/county/province | ||
* '''<code>p-postal-code</code>''' - postal code, e.g. ZIP in the US | * '''<code>p-postal-code</code>''' - postal code, e.g. ZIP in the US | ||
* '''<code>p-country-name</code>''' - full name of country | * '''<code>p-country-name</code>''' - should be full name of country, country code ok | ||
* '''<code>p-label</code>''' - a mailing label, plain text, perhaps with preformatting | * '''<code>p-label</code>''' - a mailing label, plain text, perhaps with preformatting | ||
* '''<code>p-geo</code>''' (or u-geo with a RFC 5870 geo: URL), optionally embedded [[h-geo]] | * '''<code>p-geo</code>''' (or u-geo with a RFC 5870 geo: URL), optionally embedded [[h-geo]] | ||
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Q: When marking up an address, can p-country-name be used to markup two letter country codes like "UK"? Or others like 3 letter Olympic country codes? | Q: When marking up an address, can p-country-name be used to markup two letter country codes like "UK"? Or others like 3 letter Olympic country codes? | ||
A: In short | A: In short yes. You can do: | ||
<source lang=html4strict> | |||
<span class="p-country-name">UK</span> | |||
</source> | |||
However it's better if you mark it up with the <code>abbr</code> element and provide the full name as well, e.g. | |||
<source lang=html4strict> | <source lang=html4strict> | ||
<abbr class="p-country-name" title="United Kingdom">UK</abbr> | <abbr class="p-country-name" title="United Kingdom">UK</abbr> | ||
</source> | </source> | ||
Consuming applications may interpret any 2-3 character country-name per the table of 2-3 character [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1#Officially_assigned_code_elements country codes in ISO3166]. | |||
== Background == | == Background == |
Revision as of 21:48, 20 May 2014
<entry-title>h-adr</entry-title> Tantek Çelik (Editor)
h-adr is a simple, open format for publishing structured locations such as addresses, physical and/or postal. h-adr is one of several open microformat draft standards suitable for embedding data in HTML/HTML5 on the web.
h-adr is the microformats-2 update to adr. It is most commonly used as part of an h-card or h-event.
Per CC0, to the extent possible under law, the editors have waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this work. In addition, as of 2024-11-22, the editors have made this specification available under the Open Web Foundation Agreement Version 1.0.
Example
Here is a simple postal address example:
<p class="h-adr">
<span class="p-street-address">17 Austerstræti</span>
<span class="p-locality">Reykjavík</span>
<span class="p-country-name">Iceland</span>
<span class="p-postal-code">107</span>
</p>
Get started
The class h-adr
is a root class name that indicates the presence of an h-adr.
p-street-address, p-locality, p-country-name, p-postal-code and all the other h-adr property class names listed below define properties of the h-adr.
See microformats-2-parsing to learn more about property class names.
Properties
h-adr properties, inside an element with class h-adr:
p-street-address
- house/apartment number, floor, street namep-extended-address
- additional street detailsp-post-office-box
- post office mailboxp-locality
- city/town/villagep-region
- state/county/provincep-postal-code
- postal code, e.g. ZIP in the USp-country-name
- should be full name of country, country code okp-label
- a mailing label, plain text, perhaps with preformattingp-geo
(or u-geo with a RFC 5870 geo: URL), optionally embedded h-geop-latitude
- decimal latitudep-longitude
- decimal longitudep-altitude
- decimal altitude - new in vCard4 (RFC6350)
All properties are optional.
Status
h-adr is a microformats.org draft specification. Public discussion on h-adr takes place on h-adr-feedback, the #microformats irc channel on irc.freenode.net, and microformats-new mailing list.
h-adr is ready to use and implemented in the wild, but for backwards compatibility you should also mark h-adrs up with classic adr classnames.
Property Details
(stub, add any property explanations here)
Examples in the Wild
- … add any h-adr examples you find in the wild
Validating
Test and validate microformats2 markup in general with:
- https://pin13.net/mf2/ - enter your markup directly
- https://pin13.net/ - enter a URL to a page to test where it says "Microformats Parser"
Backward Compatiblity
Publisher Compatibility
For backward compatibility, you may wish to use classic adr classnames in addition to the more future-proof h-adr properties, for example:
<p class="h-adr adr">
<span class="p-street-address street-address">123 Main St.</span>,
<span class="p-locality locality">Pleasantville</span>
...
</p>
The class adr
is a backward compatible root class name that indicates the presence of an adr.
street-address, locality, and all the other backward compatibility adr property class names are listed below.
Parser Compatibility
Microformats parsers should detect classic properties only if a classic root class name is found and parse them as microformats2 properties.
If an "h-adr" is found, don't look for an "adr" on the same element.
Compatibility root class name: adr
Properties: (parsed as p- plain text unless otherwise specified)
- post-office-box
- extended-address
- street-address
- locality
- region
- postal-code
- country-name
FAQ
What about country codes
Q: When marking up an address, can p-country-name be used to markup two letter country codes like "UK"? Or others like 3 letter Olympic country codes?
A: In short yes. You can do:
<span class="p-country-name">UK</span>
However it's better if you mark it up with the abbr
element and provide the full name as well, e.g.
<abbr class="p-country-name" title="United Kingdom">UK</abbr>
Consuming applications may interpret any 2-3 character country-name per the table of 2-3 character country codes in ISO3166.
Background
h-adr is based on the existing adr specification, which was extracted from hCard in order to allow it to be used for applications other than contact information.
See Also
- microformats2
- h-geo can be embedded in h-adr
- h-card and h-event often contain h-adr