xmdp-brainstorming
XMDP Brainstorming
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Introduction
Tantek Çelik developed XMDP to define extensions to XHTML including rel values, class names, and <meta name> properties and values. Per the XMDP spec, a link to a microformat's XMDP in the profile attribute of head element indicates that that microformat's vocabulary is formally defined in the document. A parser could read the allowed attribute values from the linked XMDP and thus know explicitly which microformats may be in use, and which class names are meant to convey which meanings.
This page is for exploring possible additions / extensions to XMDP.
See xmdp-faq and xmdp-issues for questions and issues.
Possible XMDP Additions
resolving when microformats may be in use
Currently the potential existence of microformats in a document can be declared by referencing the profile URLs for those microformats in the profile attribute of the head element of that document.
Another way would be to include the <a rel="profile" href="XMDP URL">powered by microformat xyz</a> within the container element for the microformat. The XMDP spec could then specify that when the <a> element is used in this way, it indicates that the microformat is used by the element containing the <a> element.
There are, however, several clear issues with this proposal:
- Not every microformat has a container element. Consider rel-tag one of the most widely used microformats.
- To some extent, using microformats adds to the cost of writing the document. It's like filling in a form just to write your thoughts. Putting <a> elements with each microformat adds unwanted links on top of that.
root class name identification
It could be quite convenient for "generic/universal" microformat parsers if they could read an XMDP profile and understand which of the defined class names were root class names for microformats, and thus be able to distinguish those object boundaries.
One simple thought would be that the first class name defined in a profile (e.g. hcard-profile) is the root class for that microformat. Problems:
- What about an XMDP that defines multiple microformats?
- What about a microformat that defines multiple possible root class names (e.g. hCalendar permits "vcalendar" or "vevent", hAtom permits "hfeed" or "hentry")?
linking to the XMDP
As hinted in the note on "when microformats may be in use", there are additional methods under discussion for linking to the XMDP in addition to the current method of using the profile attribute of the head element:
- Using <link rel="profile" href="link to XMDP"/>. This method can be used now and will be formalized in XHTML 2.
- A problem with this method is that it (still) requires access to the head element.
- Using <a rel="profile" href="link to XMDP">powered by microformat xyz</a> in the body of the document.
- As noted by a number of people, this approach has the added benefit of creating a viral marketing opportunity for the microformats used. For instance, developers could add badges saying they are using microformat xyz as suggested by the example.
- Blog authoring environments allow you to insert links at will, so this squarely obviates the need to access the head element.
includes / aggregate profiles
Methods for including one or more values, properties, or an entire XMDP into an other XMDP as a way of creating an aggregate profile that effectively contains definitions from multiple profiles would be quite useful. They would enable documents with microformats to simply refer to a single profile URL rather than a complete space separated set of all the profile URLs of the microformats that may be in use.
vocabulary aliasing
An XMDP document could be used to define a microformat profile that is nothing more than a simple dictionary mapping between an existing, non-standard set of HTML classes and the terms in a standard microformat profile. This would allow a publisher to support a given microformat by merely using the URI of a new profile document as the value of an individual document's head/profile attribute, rather than modifying the individual class values throughout each document to conform to an existing profile. Initial suggestion with use case description in this microformats-discuss post. Note (from Kevin's response) that HTML class attributes can contain multiple values, e.g. class="post hentry", so a publisher doesn't have to discard their existing class values to use those of a microformat.
subclassing / ontology addition
One may want to introduce a new property (or value) and base it on an existing property (or value). In this sample XMDP, the value "self" is defined, based on the value "me" from XFN 1.1:
<dl class="rel"> <dt id='self'><a href="http://www.gmpg.org/xfn/11#me" rev="extends">self</a></dt> <dd>This is a pointer to me, it extends the "me" value of XFN</dd> </dl>
There are two interesting pieces that have been added, a URL with an anchor to another XMDP profile and a rev attribute. The rev value in this example is 'extends'. These means that the page this is refering too, is extended by the property SELF. So you could make an XMDP that lists all the possible rev attributes, 'extends', 'inverse', 'equivalent', etc. Then you could 'alias' one microformat property to another.
A universal XMDP validator/parser/etc could extract data across two or more XMDP profiles and potentially reason between them. This could create a small ontology.
It is not clear if this idea actually has utility or is simply a solution looking for a problem.
XMDP XML Schema
The link shows a bad example of creating XMDP from an XSD schema. The big question I guess is why? Having XMDP defined in XSD should make it easier for machines to read Microformats, rules and strict data typing will allow Microformats to be validated when contained within an XML/XHTML document. If a document is using microformats with and XSD behind simple XPath queries can be used to harvest the information, this can then be rendered to straight XML for translation to RDF or other XML transport formats.
XSD behind XMDP also has distinct advantages for CMS authors, the XSD sitting behind xforms or sxforms to allow data entry into a CMS can be used to generate XMDP and valid Microformats when rendering content. This in theory should make it easier for CMS authors to develop a semantic core around data before exporting to XHTML + Microformats, RDF etc. and/or make data querying via web services a little more straightforward.