hcard-brainstorming
hCard Brainstorming
This page is for brainstorming about various uses and details of hCard.
Authors
Contributors
- Atamido
- ChrisMessina
- DimitriGlazkov
- ...
- ... and many others
Problems Being Solved
Some of the problems that hCard helps to solve:
- having to enter business cards that go out of date (subscribe to someone's syndicated hCard instead).
- annoying "update your contact info" email from various centralized contact info services
Examples
- See hcard-examples, which provides several illustrative instructive examples, as well as 1:1 hCard examples for each example in RFC 2426.
Using RFC2806 with hCard
RFC 2806 defines the telephone scheme "tel:", "fax:" and "modem:" to handle phone communications with URIs in the same way, "mailto:" is defined for email. It's part of the list or registered schemes by IANA : Uniform Resource Identifier (URI) SCHEMES
tel telephone [RFC2806] fax fax [RFC2806] modem modem [RFC2806]
It is practical to write your tel number like this.
<a class="tel" href="tel:+1-919-555-7878">+1-919-555-7878</a>
or even
<a class="tel" href="tel:+1-919-555-7878">Mr Smith's phone</a>
You can add support for "tel:" to your desktop and to your browser
- For Gnome, edit ~/.gnome/Gnome and add something to the URL Handlers section. (Dan Connolly uses this to get galeon to launch telnum from telagent sources for tel URIs)
- In Mozilla, Dizzy
- In Internet Explorer, Asynchronous Pluggable Protocols
On the CSS front… You could for example add automagically an icon. I have put the property !important for those who wants to add it to their own stylesheet in their browsers, so they know type of links when browsing.
a[href^="tel:"]:before { content: '\260f ' !important; padding-left: 20px !important; } a[href^="mailto:"]:before { content: '\2709 ' !important; padding-left: 20px !important; }
Encoding "modern" attributes
Since vCard was first established, various interactive communication technologies and addressing schemes have been widely adopted. Although there aren't specific properties for these technologies / addressing schemes, they can be captured as URLs or email addresses.
This has now been written up for the most part. See:
http://microformats.org/wiki/hcard-examples#New_Types_of_Contact_Info
Still to be addressed:
- iChat mac.com addresses, simply store "@mac.com" email addresses, e.g.
<a class="email" href="mailto:steve@mac.com">...
- MSN Instant Messenger, you can simple store "@hotmail.com" or "@msn.com" or "@passport.com" email addresses.
- Internet Relay Chat (IRC), use "irc:" URLs.
CSS Styles
Not only can you create semantics with the hCard values, but you can add CSS styles to them as well. You are free to style the terms in any way you want, but here we can list a few ideas for how to style terms.
If you want to encode hCard data, but do NOT want to display it in the HTML code, then you can hide that tag in CSS with the following code:
<span style="display: none">Hidden Data</span>
Transforming applications will still find the data and use it when converting hCards to vCards.
Auto-Discovery
There is currently a debate over the best way to add an auto discovery link to your HTML to extract the vCard.
On the page with the hCard encoding, the best link would be as follows:
<link rel="alternate" type="text/vcard" href="..." />
this HTML page is an alternate view of the vCard.
EtanWexler disagrees with the value of the “type” attribute. The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority has no registration for a “text/vcard” type. The registered and appropriate type for vCard entities is “text/directory”, as defined in Internet RFC 2425, “A MIME Content-Type for Directory Information”. RFC 2426, “vCard MIME Directory Profile”, specifies the vCard profile for “text/directory” entities, which profile the MIME/HTTP header field “Content-Type” would indicate with a “profile” parameter whose value is “VCARD”. It is unclear whether the HTML/XHTML “type” attribute allows values with parameters. On 2004-05-23, Björn Höhrmann sent to the HTML Working Group a request for clarification on the issue.
When on a different page, referencing that encoded page in the href would not be an alternate view of the current page. So a different rel type must be established to decribe that relationship. The ideas vary from specific to vague. The list and categories follow:
rel="contactinfo" rel="profile" rel="author" rel='PIM' rel='person' rel='about' rel='contact' rel='hcard' rel='microformat'
Example of mixing two rel types to a single page. rel="hcard xfn"
Note: using rel="vcard" indicates a link directly to a vCard. If the document links to an hCard instead, the indication is untrue and inappropriate.
Auto-Discovery for XFN
An author will typically their XFN information on a specific page, rather than all pages. In particular, a specific page separate from the home page of their blog, and thus it would be useful to have an explicit rel value to assist in auto-discovery of XFN information.
This was suggested by Jens Alfke on 20050606 at the WWDC blogger's dinner.
geo improvements
These improvements apply to both geo and hCard.
I (Tantek) have seen examples of where there is a human viewable/clickable presentation of a point on a map, and the desire to include the machine readable geo information with the same element, e.g. something like:
<abbr class="geo" title="machine-readable-geo-info"> human readable/clickable point on a map </abbr>
But to do this we must specify a syntax for putting both the latitude and longitude into the title attribute as the machine-readable-geo-info.
Fortunately, there already is a syntax for that, in vCard RFC 2426 3.4.2:
Type value: A single structured value consisting of two float values separated by the SEMI-COLON character (ASCII decimal 59). Type special notes: This type specifies information related to the global position of the object associated with the vCard. The value specifies latitude and longitude, in that order (i.e., "LAT LON" ordering). ... Type example: GEO:37.386013;-122.082932
Thus:
<abbr class="geo" title="37.386013;-122.082932"> Mountain View, CA </abbr>
I think this is pretty much a no-brainer, because the rules for parsing "geo" are simply altered to:
latitude longitude shorthand
If a "geo" property lacks explicit "latitude" and "longitude" subproperties, then the "geo" property is treated like any other string property (e.g. following rules for parsing <abbr title>
, <img alt>
etc.), where that string value has the same literal syntax as specified in RFC 2426 section 3.4.2: single structured value consisting of two float values separated by the SEMI-COLON character (ASCII decimal 59), specifying latitude and longitude, in that order.
geo links
In addition, people may publish Google Maps links like this:
<a href="http://maps.google.com/maps?q=37.386013+-122.082932">this spot</a>
(N.B. I tried and failed to get Yahoo Maps and local to do something intelligent with both "37.386013;-122.082932" and "37.386013 -122.082932").
Is it worth permitting this to be a geo as well?
I'm raising this to make sure it is considered.
However, my first guess is NO for two reasons.
- No such examples in the wild have been documented or seen as of yet (I certainly haven't seen any).
- It would involve additional parsing requirements which are almost certainly going to be site/domain specific, and encoding a particular site's query parameter syntax into a format seems like a bad idea (against principle of decentralization).
This could be mitigated if mapping services would simply accept the literal vCard GEO syntax "37.386013;-122.082932", e.g. http://maps.google.com/maps?q=37.386013;-122.082932 (which currently doesn't work) then we could make a simple rule such as for hyperlinks, parse the href attribute for a geo value at the end of the href, delimited before the value by a "=" (or perhaps "/" for services that use friendlier URLs).
altitude
Some folks have asked for "altitude" as an extension to GEO. Currently we are rejecting all property/value extensions to hCard/vCard.
radius/zoom
Kevin Marks has asked for "radius" or "zoom" as an extension to GEO. Currently we are rejecting all property/value extensions to hCard/vCard.
ISO6709
There is a description method for geographic coordinates named ISO6709 though some differs from the notation of vCard. It can describe latitude and the longitude. Height is optional. If ISO6709 is used, it is likely to be able to write as follows.
examples <abbr class="geo" title="+37.386013-122.082932/"> Mountain View, CA </abbr>
Issues with vCard Applications
Open Questions
Q: since many of the components would be using CSS classes for encoding data, it is possible to MIX two different profiles. (e.g. hCard and XFN) There are no real constraints on where/how to enforce class names, these are based on the html profile, since it is difficult to associate the text within the attribute to a specific profile.
... <a href="mailto:joe.smith@example.com" class="fn" rel="met">Joe Smith</a> ...
-- Brian Suda
Q: Preserving White space? Should the transforming applications preserve extra white space characters? For example:
<a href="http://mywebsite.com/" class="fn n"> <span class="given-name">John</span> <span class="other-names">Q.</span> <span class="family-name">Public</span> </a>
When transformed into a vCard, the N property will pick apart the span tags and create the value for N correctly seperated by colons. The FN property will take a string and simply display it. There are two possible renderings for FN:
John Q. Public John Q. Public
Either the white-space is preserved or it is not. Which should the transforming applications render?
-- Brian Suda
A: The parsing application should follow the white space collapsing rules of the mime type it retrieves. I.e. if it retrieves a "text/html" document, it should do HTML white space collapsing.
-- Tantek
Many of the Questions and Answers are relevant to both ["hCal"] and hCard.
Q: Would it be appropriate to wrap the name of the vCard owner with ? This may give the hCard some added semantic value in the XHTML document.
<span class="agent"> <span class="vcard"> <span class="email"> <a class="internet" href="mailto:jfriday@host.com"> <dfn> <span class="fn">Joe Friday</span> </dfn> </a> </span> <span class="tel">+1-919-555-7878</span> <span class="title">Area Administrator, Assistant</span> </span> </span>
-- Ben Ward
Applications
Applications that are hCard aware or can convert hCard to vCard formats.
Copy hCards favelet(s)
- I think a Favelet would work nicely here. When you find a page that is hCard friendly, you click the favlet and you get yourself a vCard. This is done! See X2V in the implementations section of the hCard spec.
Distributed Commentor Icons
- See using hCards in your blog for an example of hCards used for comment authors (commentors). The system used there, "Gravatars", is a centralized site that serves commentor icons that requires login etc.
What if we gave each commentor the option of hosting their own icon?
A distributed commentor icon implementation could work like this:
- Given the URL of a commentor, look for an
<address>
element with classname of "vcard" at the commentor's URL. The<address>
element is supposed to be the contact information for the page (see hCard FAQ for more info), so this makes sense. - Next, look for the first element inside that hcard that has a classname of "logo".
- Hopefully that element is an
<img>
, and if so, use its src to get the commentor's icon. - Presto. You've got distributed commentor icons!
Spam prevention
hCard uses mailto:
links, and therefore
it automatically "inherits" the disadvantage of mailto:
links:
These links can be easily detected by emails spiders (used by spammers).
There are ways to prevent email address detection by simple email spiders, while still retaining full compatibility with (X)HTML applications. One common way is to "encode" the the "m" of "mail" and "@" with character entities:
Example of the original link:
<a class="email" href="mailto:john.smith@example.com">john.smith@example.com</a>
Example of the "encoded" link:
<a class="email" href="mailto:john.smith@example.com">john.smith@example.com</a>
Simple email spiders which do not do character entity decoding will therefore not be able to find your email address.
Note: Perhaps there are or will be email spiders which can decode entities, so the this technique will only help with some (cheap) email spiders. (See also: http://rbach.priv.at/Misc/2005/EmailSpiderTest)
Tutorials
- How to hCard encode entries in Popular blog software.
- Good reasons to publish your hCard
- as a business, get people to put you in their address book so they'll find you later
- as a business with an email list, get people to add you (with email address) to their address book so that your email list works via whitelisting via the address book.
Parsing
See separate hCard parsing page.
Post vCard additions
Some have found vCard to be limiting in terms of the data/properties/fields they want to express in contact information. Some implementations use vCard extensions to express such information.
This section is for documentation of such suggested additions. Note, we will require empirical evidence of actual *real world* examples on the Web of people publishing this information as part of contact information, before considering such additions/extensions.
- altitude. From hcard-issues.
- No evidence provided that contact information on the Web publishes this information.
TODO
- The hcard-profile needs verification and perhaps a URL for retrieving the actual XMDP, rather than as <pre> text on a wiki page.
- Complete translating the examples from the vCard spec into hCard, and place them on a separate hCard examples page.
- Create a "rich" but realistic hCard example, say for example for a salesperson, who wants to put a whole bunch of contact information on their website in order to be found/contacted easily.
- Provide examples of how to encode instant messaging (IM) accounts. Figure out what would the mailto: or aim: URL in hCard look like in vCard. And take a look at what vCard applications do today with IM addresses.
References
Normative References
Informative References
- Personal Data Interchange (PDI) at the Internet Mail Consortium
- Markup language design notes
- A Touch of Class
Other Implementations/Ideas
- Representing vCard Objects in RDF/XML This could allow conversion of vCard data from XHTML to RDF and from RDF to XHTML
- It would also be possible to convert XFN and hCard to FoaF and back.
Accepted Suggestions
Encoding Company data as a Business Card (proposal)
( Accepted: http://microformats.org/wiki/hcard#Organization_Contact_Info )
In the wild there are several hCards that do not currently validate because they are businesses that have omitted the "fn" property in favor of the "org" property.
Proposal: hCards representing a business or organization MUST set fn AND org to the same value. Parsers may then use this equivalence, if detected, to treat an hCard as the contact info for a business or organization rather than an individual.
Note that Apple Address Book supports this semantic when importing vCards.
See the Technorati Contact Info for an example.
Implied "FN and N" Optimization (proposal)
Right now a parser first looks for an "n" element.
And then if no "n" is present, look for an "fn" element to use to imply an "n" element per the "implied n property" rules in the spec.
BACKGROUND:
Due to the prevalence of the use of "nicknames" or "handles" on the Web, in actual content published on the Web (e.g. authors of reviews), there has been a discussion about adding a "fn" shortcut to the "n" shortcut that used the "nickname" as a fallback.
PROPOSAL:
We should consider adding one more implied optimization after the steps documented above and that is:
If no "fn" is present either, then look for a "nickname" element to use to imply both the "fn", and the "n/given-name", leaving the "n/family-name" as empty.
This would enable "nickname" only hCards for denoting and individual on a website, which is quite common on blogs and reviews published on the Web.
- +1 Atamido
- +1 ChrisMessina - note: multiple alternate nicknames should also be allowed
- +1 DimitriGlazkov
Rejected Suggestions
Suggestion: The use of class="url" on an <a> tag to represent an hCard URL property is redundant. By virtue of the <a> tag you know this is a URL.
Rejected. This is a bad suggestion because although it appears to reduce redunancy and keep things cleaner, it also creates a few problems. Without explicitly noting that this is a URL then any <a> tags within a 'vcard' would be considered a URL, for example:
<span class="vcard"> ... <ul class="categories"> <li><a href="http://w3c.org">W3C</a></li> </ul> ... </span>
There is no way to "turn-off" the encoding of the W3C URL, whereas if "url" needed to be explicitly listed in the class attribute list, then by NOT listing it you could effectively turn it off.