item-brainstorming
Thing Brainstorming
This page is to collect ideas about an "thing" microformat or design pattern, for representing things that physically exist. At this point, my thinking is to aim for understanding the intersection not the union of attribute of things!
Editors
Authors
- David Janes
- James Darling
- your name here...
Introduction to the idea
Rationale
- items/things are used in other micrformats
- unlike people and places, items do not currently get a "container"; thus, attributes being associated with a (say) Review actually should be attached the thing itself
- to cut down on the work required to create new microformats about things (wine, houses, cars, ...)
Notes
This is very much analogous to hCard and there is no reason that this shouldn't reuse as much as possible of this. In particular:
- fn - the name of an item
- url - the web address of an item
- photo - a photo of an item
- adr - the address of an item (for example, a house)
- geo - likewise
More of this will be discovered in the examples discovery.
hThing-based microformats
Representation
This may just be a design pattern -- that is, a template for create new microformats in the future. If it is a microformat, how we identify the type of thing is an open question -- we could do it like phone number types in hCard or it could be a new class element (or both). I.e. do we create a top-level class "hWine" or do we do <span class="type">wine</a>
New Attributes
One can see that there are many common properties that can be shared about different types of things. Manufactor, brand name, generic name, color.... The base item microformat may avoid trying to define this and instead allow new/future microformats to do the discovery.
- Quantity - can be assumed to be 1 unless specified.
hItem and hCard
Immediately the idea of a hItem demands the idea of the option for a contained hCard for the owner, but what about a large qauntity of items owned by a single owner. Would a hCard be required in each hItem, or would it be possible to wrap all the hItems in a hCard?
Analysis of Examples
Tier 1: in use in microformats today
Tier 2: common to 80%+ of examples
Tier 3: less frequently used items
Tier 4: specific to particular thing-types
How this could be used
This section is meant to explore the ways that a item/thing microformat would be used in practice.