figure

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figure 0.3

Specification

This is a DRAFT specification.

Authors
Toby Inkster (affiliations above)
Acknowledgements
See acknowledgements.

Copyright and patents statements apply.

Introduction

Many HTML documents include supporting images, such as photographs, flow charts, graphs, blueprints or screen captures. These are usually incorporated using the HTML <img> element, however this offers no way of differentiating between such supplementary content and mere decorative images.

Authors often wish to annotate these images with captions or attributions. Currently there is no markup to explicitly associate such text with an image and readers must rely on the proximity of the image and text on the finished rendered page. This specification aims to allow authors to mark up captions and credits, explicitly associating them with an image.

This specification is not intended as a method for marking up all images on web pages — the HTML <img/> element is adequate for decorative and many other images. This specification is intended to be used for images that add or clarify information to the article's text.

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.

Format

Properties

Key

Based on Perl's standard quantifiers:

bold {1} MUST be present exactly once
italic* OPTIONAL, and MAY occur more than once
+ MUST be present, and MAY occur more than once
? OPTIONAL, but MUST NOT occur more than once
[square brackets] list of common values
(parentheses) data format
# comment
! awaiting documentation

Additionally, an figure MAY contain zero or more links marked up with rel-tag.

Please note that the "legend" element should contain what would normally be called a "caption". The term "legend" is used in this specification instead of "caption" in order to maintain parity with the element names used in HTML5. (In turn HTML 5 uses <legend> instead of <caption> to avoid triggering table layouts in legacy browsers.)

The subject, credit and tags may be children of the legend, in which case the text within them forms part of the legend as well as part of the child elements.

Embedded Microformats

If an element with class "credit" also has class "vcard" then the element SHOULD be considered to be the hcard for a credited person or organisation. Otherwise it MUST be considered as a plain text credit.

If an element with class "subject" also has a class "vcard" then the element SHOULD be considered to be the hcard for the subject of the image - for example the person depicted by a photograph or sketch. If an element with class "subject" also has a class "adr" or "geo" then the element should be considered to be the address or geographic location of the subject of the picture - for example the location of a landscape in a photo or the address of a the building shown in blueprints. If an element with class "subject" also has a class "vevent" then the element should be considered to be the vevent for the subject of a figure - for example a photograph of a sporting event, or a diagram of a military operation.

Design Patterns Used

The include pattern MAY be used within figures.

As the figure microformat does not specify any properties that are not human-readable, the abbr design pattern SHOULD NOT be used directly within a figure, though it MAY be used within children formatted in accordance to another microformat - e.g. as vevents often use the abbr design pattern to specify their start time, a figure subject formatted as a vevent MAY use the abbr design pattern in accordance with the hcalendar specification.

Minimisation

To simplify markup, a number of shortcuts are explicitly allowed by this specification.

  1. When no "image" class is found within the figure, the first <img> element MUST be taken to be the image.
  2. If the "legend" class is found on the same element as the "image" class (or the image inferred by the previous rule), then the title attribute MUST be used as the legend. If the title attribute is not present, or is empty, then the alt attribute MAY be used in its place.
    • Rationale: some people have questioned the use of the title attribute rather than the alt attribute. The purpose of the figure's legend is to display explanatory text alongside the image. The purpose of the alt attribute is "to serve as content when the element cannot be rendered normally" [1] — i.e. when the image cannot be displayed. Thus the alt and legend fulfil different purposes. Authors are encouraged to consider accessibility carefully when building their page, and supply appropriate alt text in addition to the image's legend.
  3. The "image" and/or "legend" classes may be attached to the same element as the element with the "figure" class.
  4. The longdesc attribute MAY be used to point to a legend elsewhere on the page in a manner similar to the include pattern. As with the inclusion, parsers should ignore the pattern if the fragment linked to is an off-page resource.
    <div class="figure">

<img class="image" src="foo.jpeg" longdesc="#foolegend" alt="A picture of a rising foo." /> </div> <!-- ... --> <p class="legend" id="foolegend">Foos rise early in the morning.</p>

XHTML Meta Data Profile

Authors using the figure microformat SHOULD add a profile link to the XMDP profile. The preferred URL is http://purl.org/uF/figure/draft. For more information on how to link to the profile, see Profile URIs.

class
HTML 4 definition of "class". This profile defines the following class names:
figure
A section containing a graphical element which provides information relevant to the document.
image
The primary graphical element contained within a section with class="figure".
legend
A description or explanation for a graphic, intended to be displayed alongside it.
subject
A person, place, event or other thing or concept depicted by a graphic.
credit
A person, organisation or other agent that created, contributed to or supplied a graphic.

Examples

<div class="figure">
  <img class="image" src="photo.jpeg" alt="">
  <p class="legend">
    <a rel="tag" href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photography">Photo</a>
    of <span class="subject">Albert Einstein</span> by
    <span class="vcard credit">
      <span class="fn">Paul Ehrenfest</span>
      (<span class="role">photographer</span>)
    </span>
  </p>
</div>

Parsed as:

  • Image: photo.jpeg
  • Legend: Photo of Albert Einstein by Paul Ehrenfest (photographer)
  • Credit: Paul Ehrenfest (hCard)
  • Subject: Albert Einstein
  • Categories: Photography
<p class="figure">
  <label style="display:block" class="legend">January sales data</label>
  <img class="image" src="salesdata.png"
  alt="Widget sales have fallen slightly, but widget repair kits have sold well.">
</p>

Parsed as:

  • Image: salesdata.png
  • Legend: January sales data

Examples Using Minimisation

The following examples MUST all be considered equivalent:

<div class="figure">
  <img class="image" src="foo.jpeg" alt="">
  <span class="legend">Foo</span>
</div>
<div class="figure">
  <img src="foo.jpeg" alt="">
  <span class="legend">Foo</span>
</div>
<div class="figure">
  <img class="legend" src="foo.jpeg" alt="" title="Foo">
</div>
<img class="figure legend" src="foo.jpeg" alt="" title="Foo">

HTML 5 Considerations

When used in HTML 5, any <figure> element has an implied class "figure"; any <legend> element has an implied class "legend". For example, the following HTML 5:

<figure>
  <img src="foo.jpeg" alt="">
  <legend>Foo</legend>
</figure>

is interpreted as if it were:

<figure class="figure">
  <img src="foo.jpeg" alt="">
  <legend class="legend">Foo</legend>
</figure>

Inspiration and Acknowledgments

This microformat is largely intended to be a simple "port" of HTML 5's <figure> construct. The three required properties (figure, image and caption) are derived from that. The additional properties (credit, subject) are included because this information seems to be commonly supplied in figures "in the wild" in prose even if it is not marked up with wrapper elements.

Copyright

This specification is released into the public domain.

Public Domain Contribution Requirement. Since the author(s) released this work into the public domain, in order to maintain this work's public domain status, all contributors to this page agree to release their contributions to this page to the public domain as well. Contributors may indicate their agreement by adding the public domain release template to their user page per the Voluntary Public Domain Declarations instructions. Unreleased contributions may be reverted/removed.

Patents

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

See also