hRecipe 0.22

From Microformats Wiki
Revision as of 23:35, 20 June 2024 by GRegorLove (talk | contribs) (s/<source>/<syntaxhighlight>/)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
See latest version: h-recipe

This document represents a draft microformat specification. Although drafts are somewhat mature in the development process, the stability of this document cannot be guaranteed, and implementers should be prepared to keep abreast of future developments and changes. Watch this wiki page, or follow discussions on the #microformats IRC channel to stay up-to-date.

hRecipe.png

hRecipe is a simple, open, distributed format, suitable for embedding information about recipes for cooking in (X)HTML, Atom, RSS, and arbitrary XML. hRecipe is one of several microformats open standards. This page and Microformat is in the public domain.

hRecipe Microformat Draft Specification

Editor

Authors

Contributors

Andy Mabbett, Frances Berriman, Cameron Perry, John LeMasney, Tantek Çelik, SudarshanP, Ciaran McNulty, Lee Jordan, Robert Bachmann, jeffmcneill, Manu Sporny, Ryan King, HollyMarieKoltz, Straup, Christophe Ducamp, Mercman, Yde, Ameer Dawood, Scottk, Lee Jordan, MonroAlmon, EstevaoSamuel, Brian Suda, SteveL, JohnLeMasney,

Microformats #Copyright and #Patents statements apply.


Introduction

The hRecipe microformat is designed for the mark-up of instructions for creating meals, drinks or food-based items.

It is difficult for a browser to extract semantic information about a recipe described on a web page. Metadata such as author and name and details such as ingredients, method, preparation time etc provide relevant information about the recipe.

Having such information marked up can provide a number of benefits to the viewer. If a web browser understands that a particular web page contains a recipe with specific characteristics, it can produce richer interactions. For example, specific searches may be performed for ingredients or authors via general search services such as Google and Wikipedia. Additionally, classification by crawlers can become more accurate. If there are 20 recipes found on a page, and they all contain a certain ingredient, it can be assumed that the page is not only about cooking, but also about that particular ingredient.

In order to enable and encourage the sharing, distribution, syndication, and aggregation of recipes, the authors propose the hRecipe microformat, an open standard for distributed recipe metadata. The authors have researched both numerous recipe-examples in the wild and earlier attempts at recipe-formats, and have designed hRecipe around a simple minimal schema for recipe content. Feedback is encouraged on the hRecipe feedback page.

Inspiration and Acknowledgments

Many thanks to the various individuals that did research and proposed ideas and discussion related to the hRecipe-format and recipes in general.

Scope

hRecipe is a format to annotate descriptions and lists of ingredients for the preparation of food and meals. Recipes consistently share several common properties. hRecipe has been based on this minimal common subset.

Out of scope

Recipes that are not for stuff that's meant to be eaten by humans are out of scope.


Format

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.

In General

The hRecipe format is based on a set of properties common to numerous recipe sites and formats in use today on the web. Where possible property names have been chosen based on those defined by related microformat standards.
Some properties are marked experimental since they exceed the minimum set of properties needed to describe a recipe but still are very commonly used on the web. It's not sure if they are relevant enough for inclusion in the format. Implementation and general uptake of these properties will be observed and inform further decisions. So their use is not at all discouraged - but use them with care and be prepared for their eventual removal from the final spec.


Schema

The hRecipe schema consists of the following properties:

  • hrecipe
    • fn. required. text. the name of the recipe.
    • ingredient. required. 1 or more. text with optional valid (x)HTML markup.
      • value and type. optional. [experimental]
    • yield. optional. text.
    • instructions. optional. text with optional valid (x)HTML markup.
    • duration. optional. 1 or more. text.
    • photo. optional. 1 or more. using any element containing a URL, such as IMG. [experimental]
    • summary. optional. text. [experimental]
    • author. optional. 1 or more. [experimental]
    • published. optional. [experimental]
    • nutrition. optional. 1 or more. [experimental]
      • value and type. optional. [experimental]
    • tag. optional. 1 or more. [experimental]
    • license. optional. 1 or more. just use rel-license to license recipe permalink pages

Property details

Property names fn, photo, author, value and type are reused from hCard. Property name duration is reused from hAudio. Property name summary is reused from hCalendar. Property name published is reused from hAtom. Property name tag is reused from rel-tag.


The fields of the hRecipe schema represent the following:

hRecipe

A hRecipe is used to identify and describe values and metadata typically associated with a recipe.

  • A hRecipe property is identified by the name hrecipe

fn

The title of a single recipe. A short textual description used to identify the work among interested parties. This can be the name of a meal or a short description regarding it's ingredients.

  • The property is identified by the name fn.
  • A Recipe MUST include a fn.
  • The property MUST follow the conventions outlined in hCard e.g. by using only plain text.

ingredient

Describes one or more ingredients used in the recipe.

  • The property is identified by the name ingredient.
  • A Recipe MUST include one or more ingredients.
  • The property MAY include valid HTML markup (e.g. a list of ingredients).
  • The property MAY include the properties value and type following the conventions outlined in hCard, e.g.
    <p class="ingredient"><span class="value">125</span><span class="type">ml</span> milk</p>
    
    In this case each ingredient should be marked up with it's own ingredient property. These subproperties are considered experimental and may be removed from the final specification or replaced by 'num' and 'unit' from measure.

yield

Specifies the quantity produced by the recipe, like how many persons it satisfyies or how many pieces can be made of it.

  • The property is identified by the name yield.
  • A Recipe MAY include a yield.

instructions

The method of the recipe.

  • The property is identified by the name instructions.
  • A Recipe MAY include a instructions property.
  • The property MAY include valid HTML markup e.g. paragraphs or a list of steps.

duration

The time it takes to prepare the meal described by the recipe. Multiple duration properties can be used to denote e.g. time for preparing a dough, time needed for the dough to raise, time to bake the dough, time for decorating the cake etc.

  • The property is identified by the name duration.
  • A Recipe MAY include one or more duration properties.
  • The property MAY encode the timespan as outlined in the value-class-pattern. A duration of 1 hour 30 minutes would translate to "PT1H30M" in ISO 8601 format and can be encoded as follows:
    <span class="duration"><span class="value-title" title="PT1H30M"> </span>90 min</span>
    

photo

Accompanying image.

  • The property is identified by the name photo.
  • A Recipe MAY include one or more photo properties.
  • The property SHOULD use an <img> element. It MAY use any other element that contains a URL, such as <a> or <object>, but it is not recommended. See notes below.
  • The property is considered experimental and may be removed from the final specification.

summary

The summary provides a short introduction to or an accompanying statement about the recipe.

  • The property is identified by the name summary.
  • A Recipe MAY include a summary.
  • The property MUST follow the conventions outlined in hCalendar. Plain text fulfills these requirements.
  • The property is considered experimental and may be removed from the final specification.

author

An author is the person who wrote the recipe.

  • The property is identified by the name author.
  • A Recipe MAY include one or more author properties.
  • The contents of the element MAY be a plain text string in which case it defaults to a "vcard fn". Anything more elaborate MUST follow the conventions outlined in hCard.
  • The element is considered experimental and may be removed from the final specification.

published

The date the recipe was published.

  • The property is identified by the name published.
  • A Recipe MAY include a published date.
  • The property MAY be encoded using the value-class-pattern, e.g.:
    <p>Published <span class="published"><span class="value-title" title="2008-10-14T10:05:37-01:00"> </span>14. Oct 2008</span></p>
    
  • The property is considered experimental and may be removed from the final specification.

nutrition

Nutritional information like calories, fat, dietary fiber etc.

  • The property is identified by name nutrition.
  • A Recipe MAY include one or more nutrition properties.
  • The property MAY include the properties value and type following the conventions outlined in hCard. In this case each nutritional information item should be marked up with it's own nutrition property. These subelement are considered experimental and may be replaced by 'num' and 'unit' from measure.
  • The property nutrition itself is also considered experimental and may be removed from the final specification.

tag

A keyword indicating a subject or an important aspect of the recipe like it's main ingredient, type of meal etc.

  • The property is identified by the name tag.
  • A Recipe MAY include one or more tag's.
  • The property MUST follow the conventions outlined in rel-tag.
  • The property is considered experimental and may be removed from the final specification.


license

'license' is simply re-use of the rel-license microformat as a building block.

Use rel-license to link to a license for the recipe on the recipe permalink page.

Version history

  • Version 0.22 changed the proposed formatting of time and date from the datetime-design-pattern, which has accessibility issues, to the value-class-pattern. Also corrected some errors in the example especially with regard to the correct handling of vcard properties.
  • Version 0.21 changed the status of ingredient/value and ingredient/type to experimental, mentioning that there still is discussion if they should be replaced by 'num' and 'unit' from measure (which is still in brainstorming).
  • Version 0.2: From Version 0.1 some elements have been renamed to strenghten re-use of established elements: fn for hRecipe-title, summary for hRecipe-summary, duration for preparation-time, value and type for num and unit. Also some elements have been marked experimental because of concerns of element bloat. See the hrecipe-issues page for a more thorough discussion.
    Draft 0.1 was already a result of long lasting efforts. Nonetheless after publishing of it there has been a lively debate about some properties. Since they mostly could be resolved version 0.2 is considered fairly stable now, although of course you never know ;-)


Parser Processing Notes

  • If the "author" property contains only a plain text string it should be regarded as of type "vcard fn".


Semantic XHTML Design Principles

Note: the Semantic XHTML Design Principles were written primarily within the context of developing hCard and hCalendar, thus it may be easier to understand these principles in the context of the hCard design methodology (i.e. read that first). Tantek

XHTML is built on XML, and thus XHTML based formats can be used not only for convenient display presentation, but also for general purpose data exchange. In many ways, XHTML based formats exemplify the best of both HTML and XML worlds. However, when building XHTML based formats, it helps to have a guiding set of principles.

  1. Reuse the schema (names, objects, properties, values, types, hierarchies, constraints) as much as possible from pre-existing, established, well-supported standards by reference. Avoid restating constraints expressed in the source standard. Informative mentions are ok.
    1. For types with multiple components, use nested elements with class names equivalent to the names of the components.
    2. Plural components are made singular, and thus multiple nested elements are used to represent multiple text values that are comma-delimited.
  2. Use the most accurately precise semantic XHTML building block for each object etc.
  3. Otherwise use a generic structural element (e.g. <span> or <div>), or the appropriate contextual element (e.g. an <li> inside a <ul> or <ol>).
  4. Use class names based on names from the original schema, unless the semantic XHTML building block precisely represents that part of the original schema. If names in the source schema are case-insensitive, then use an all lowercase equivalent. Components names implicit in prose (rather than explicit in the defined schema) should also use lowercase equivalents for ease of use. Spaces in component names become dash '-' characters.
  5. Finally, if the format of the data according to the original schema is too long and/or not human-friendly, use <abbr> instead of a generic structural element, and place the literal data into the 'title' attribute (where abbr expansions go), and the more brief and human readable equivalent into the element itself. Further informative explanation of this use of <abbr>: Human vs. ISO8601 dates problem solved


More Semantic Equivalents

For some properties there is a more semantic equivalent, and therefore they get special treatment, e.g.:

  • For "photo", use <img class="photo" src="..." alt="" />


Language

  • To explicitly convey the natural language that an recipe is written in, use the standard (X)HTML 'lang' or 'xml:lang' attribute on the element with class="hrecipe"
    • e.g. <p>I like <span class="hrecipe" lang="de"><span class="fn">Kartoffelknödel</span></span> best.</p>
  • If portions of an hRecipe (e.g. an ingredient name) are in a different language to the rest of the hRecipe, use the 'lang' or 'xml:lang' attribute on those portions.
  • hRecipe parsers which need to handle the native language of hRecipe MUST process the standard (X)HTML 'lang' or 'xml:lang' attribute as specified.
  • hRecipe parsers which need to handle native language MAY traverse up the DOM to discover the native language of the page and apply that to the hRecipe if no other language is specified on the hRecipe.


Human vs. Machine Readable

If an <abbr> element is used for a property, then its 'title' attribute is used for the value of the property, instead of the contents of the element, which can then be used to provide a user-friendly alternate presentation of the value.

If an <a> element is used for one or more properties, it MUST be treated as follows:

  1. For the 'photo' property and any other property that takes a URL as its value, the href="..." attribute provides the property value.
  2. For other properties, the element's content is the value of the property.

If an <img> element is used for the 'photo' property, it MUST use the property value provided by the src="..." attribute as property value.

If an <object> element is used for the 'photo' property, it MUST use the property value provided by the data="..." attribute as property value.


Notes

This section is informative.

  • Non so far.


XMDP Profile

<dl class="profile">
 <dt>class</dt>
 <dd><p>
  <a rel="help" href="http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/struct/global.html#adef-class">
   HTML4 definition of the 'class' attribute.</a>
  This meta data profile defines some 'class' attribute values (class names) 
  and their meanings as suggested by a 
  <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/WD-htmllink-970328#profile">
   draft of "Hypertext Links in HTML"</a>.</p>
  <dl>
   <dt>hrecipe</dt>
   <dd>
    Used to identify and describe metadata associated with instructions for creating meals, drinks or food-based items.
   </dd>
   <dt>fn</dt>
   <dd>
    The title of the recipe.
   </dd>
   <dt>ingredient</dt>
   <dd>
    Describes the ingredient(s) used in the recipe.
   </dd>
   <dt>yield</dt>
   <dd>
    Specifies the quantity produced by the recipe.
   </dd>
   <dt>instructions</dt>
   <dd>
    The method of the recipe.
   </dd>
   <dt>duration</dt>
   <dd>
    The time it takes to prepare the meal described by the recipe.
   </dd>
   <dt>photo</dt>
   <dd>
    Accompanying image.
   </dd>
   <dt>summary</dt>
   <dd>
    The summary provides a short introduction or an accompanying statement about the recipe.
   </dd>
   <dt>author</dt>
   <dd>
   The person who authored the recipe..
   </dd>
   <dt>published</dt>
   <dd>
    The date that the recipe was made available to the public.
   </dd>
   <dt>nutrition</dt>
   <dd>
    Nutritional information like calories, fat, dietary fiber etc.
   </dd>
   <dt>tag</dt>
   <dd>
    Keyword(s) describing the recipe.
   </dd>
  </dl>
 </dd>
</dl>


Examples

This section is informative.

Here will be a few examples of recipes, from real web sites, showing how they could be easily enhanced to use hRecipe. In the meantime the following contrieved example will have to do.

<div class="hrecipe">
    <h1 class="fn">Pommes Frites</h1>
    <p class="summary">
        Pommes frites originate in outer space. They are served hot.<br />
        This recipe is only an example. Don't try this at home!
    </p>
    <p>
        Contributed by <span class="author">CJ Tom</span> and the
        <span class="author vcard"><a class="url fn" href="http://example.com">Cooky Gang</a></span>.
    </p>
     <p>Published <span class="published"><span class="value-title" title="2008-10-14T10:05:37-01:00"> </span>14. Oct 2008</span></p>
    <img src="/img/pommes.png" class="photo" width="100" height="100" alt="Pommes Frites"/>
    <h2>Ingredients</h2>
    <ul>
        <li class="ingredient">
            <span class="value">500</span> 
            <span class="type">gramme</span> potatoes, hard cooking.
        </li>
        <li class="ingredient">
            <span class="value">1</span> <span class="type">spoonful</span> of salt
        </li>
        <li>
            You may want to provide some 
            <span class="ingredient">Ketchup and Mayonnaise</span>
            as well.
        </li>
    </ul>
    <h2>Instructions</h2>
    <ul class="instructions">
        <li>First wash the potatoes.</li>
        <li>Then slice and dice them and put them in boiling fat.</li>
        <li>After a few minutes take them out again.</li>
    </ul>
    <h2>Further details</h2>
    <p>Enough for <span class="yield">12 children</span>.</p>
    <p>Preparation time is approximately 
        <span class="duration"><span class="value-title" title="PT1H30M"> </span>90 min</span>
    </p>
    <p>Add <span  class="duration"><span class="value-title" title="PT30M"></span>half an hour</span> to prepare your homemade Ketchup.</p>
    <p>This recipe is <a href="http://www.example.com/tags/difficulty/easy" rel="tag">easy</a> and <a href="http://www.example.com/tags/tastyness/delicious" rel="tag">delicious</a>.</p>
    <p>
        <span class="nutrition">
        Pommes Frites have more than 
        <span class="value">1000</span> 
        <span class="type">Joule</span>
        Energy</span>, 
        while Ketchup and Mayonnaise have 
        <span class="nutrition">0 vitamins</span>.
    </p>
</div>

Examples in the wild

This section is informative.

Sites and pages that publish hRecipes. When it gets too big we can move it to a separate page like hrecipe-examples-in-wild.

Implementations

This section is informative.

Tools for generating and consuming hRecipes. When it gets too big we can move it to a separate page like hrecipe-implementations.

Consuming hRecipes (sites and tools that consume and do something with hRecipes)

Generating hRecipes (sites and tools that help produce and publish hRecipes)

  • RecipeSEO Application - a nice hRecipe creator form with fields for title/name, ingredients (expandable), instructions, and more options (author, photo, yield, etc.)
  • Recipe SEO WordPress Plugin: RecipeSEO Plugin helps you publish hRecipe on your self-hosted WordPress blog. Donation supported.
  • WordPress hRecipe Plugin. There's a WordPress hRecipe Plugin available which makes adding hRecipe metadata to recipes very easy, practically effortless. Very nice!
  • hRecipeHelper Chrome Extension. Released 16th March, 2011 hRecipeHelper A Chrome Extension for building hRecipe formatted HTML for blogging or websites.
  • hRecipeHelper web app. Released 5th April, 2011 hRecipeHelper-webapp Very similar to the Chrome Extension but, now available for other modern browsers and even IE8.

References

Normative References

Informative References

Copyright

Per Microformats_Wiki:Copyrights, hRecipe was placed into the public domain on 2008-11-14 by the authors. There are no usage, distribution, re-printing, or any other restrictions of any kind with regards to the text or content of this specification.

Patents

This specification is subject to a royalty free patent policy, e.g. per the W3C Patent Policy, and IETF RFC3667 & RFC3668.

Public Domain Release

The authors and editors of this page due hereby relinquish their copyright on the document and release the text of this page into the public domain.


Work in progress

This specification is a work in progress. As additional aspects are discussed, understood, and written, they will be added.

derivative works

  • hRecipe in RDF - mapping of hRecipe into a RDF vocabulary called "aRecipe"

related pages

Per the microformats process, the recipe effort developed

towards the development of this draft.