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Revision as of 15:24, 12 August 2007 by IMZ (talk | contribs) (→‎Drafts: added some short descriptions (taken from the formats' pages))
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Welcome to the microformats wiki!

Please start with the introduction page and read how-to-play before making any edits.

Introduction

Definition

Microformats are small bits of HTML that represent things like people, events, tags etc. in webpages.

Microformats enable the publishing of higher fidelity information on the Web, providing the fastest & simplest way to support feeds and APIs for your website. See more explanations of what are microformats, and what you can do with them.

How to contribute

Do you want to help take microformats to the next level? You can:

Specifications

Microformats open standards specifications (see also: implementations, examples-in-the-wild)

Drafts

  • adr: a simple format for marking up address information
  • geo: a simple format for marking up WGS84 geographic coordinates (latitude; longitude)
  • hAtom: a microformat for content that can be syndicated, primarily but not exclusively weblog postings
  • hResume: a microformat for publishing resumes and CVs
  • hReview - hreview creator
  • rel-directory: a way for a page to indicate that the destination of a hyperlink is a directory listing containing an entry for the current page
  • rel-enclosure: a format for indicating files to cache
  • rel-home: a way to indicate that the destination of a hyperlink is the homepage of the site in which the current page appears
  • rel-payment: a microformat for making exchanges of support (be it financial or otherwise) possible
  • Robots Exclusion
  • xFolk

Design Patterns

Design patterns are common uses of markup across microformats.

Exploratory Discussions

Per the microformats process: research and analysis of real-world examples, existing formats, and brainstorming to motivate the microformat. Please check rejected-formats before making additions.

Examples

tools, test cases, additional research

The first place to look for examples, code, and test cases is in the pages for each individual microformat. There are only a few cross-cutting tools and services that need to process more than one microformat. This section is intended for editors, parsers, validators, test cases, and other information relevant across multiple microformats.

resources

shared work areas

microformats wiki translations

You may read and edit microformats articles in many other languages:

See also other-languages, and how-to-start-a-new-translation.