rel-design-pattern: Difference between revisions

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(→‎rel="bookmark": citation needed)
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==== rel="bookmark" ====
==== rel="bookmark" ====


The [http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/types.html#h-6.12 HTML4 spec] describes a bookmark as "a link to a key entry point within an extended document". By convention, this entry point also captures the notion of a "permalink".
The [http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/types.html#h-6.12 HTML4 spec] describes a bookmark as "a link to a key entry point within an extended document". By convention ('''citation needed'''), this entry point also captures the notion of a "permalink".


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Revision as of 16:39, 24 September 2007

Rel design pattern

Purpose

Use the rel-design-pattern to indicate the meaning of a link (i.e. a href) in an XHTML document

How to use it

  • define the semantic meaning of a link (A with href) within a microformat and give it a name mf-rel-value
    • this definition may also extend to the value of elements and text enclosed by the link
  • add rel="mf-rel-value" to hyperlinks that have that semantic meaning within that microformat.
  • simple microformats that use only the rel-design-pattern are typically named after the rel-value

Examples

rel="bookmark"

The HTML4 spec describes a bookmark as "a link to a key entry point within an extended document". By convention (citation needed), this entry point also captures the notion of a "permalink".

<a href="archive/entry.html" rel="bookmark">A Document Entry</a>

rel="tag"

rel-tag defines semantic meaning for by the URI and enclosed elements using rel="tag"

<a href="http://technorati.com/tag/tech" rel="tag">tech</a>

See Also