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>>>Roland Schwaenzl said:
> Dave wrote:
> > We are still working on this; consider the above a preview :)
A repeat of the warning. RDF Core will work on writing better words
along with test cases to support this, and we have to extend the test
case language in order to do this, which will take a little while.
>
> Are you saying RDF Parser will be supposed to create literally and uniformly
(" decorations for content in
> the future?? Something like (of course enclosed by the ususal namespace decl
arations and rdf - begin/end tags)
>
> <rdf:Description rdf:about="http://foo.org/"><dc:title>genius</dc:title></rdf
:Description>
>
> will give the graph
>
> http://foo.org/ --http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/--> ("genius
")
>
> and NOT
> http://foo.org/ --http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/--> genius
>
>
> I'm not sure, whether i should like this.
[I wish you would send email with lines <80 chars Roland ]
I don't understand what your problem is
<rdf:Description rdf:about="http://foo.org/">
<dc:title>genius</dc:title>
</rdf:Description>
will generate the statement
subject URI http://foo.org/
predicate URI http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/
object Literal composed of string "genius"
<rdf:Description rdf:about="http://foo.org/">
<dc:title xml:lang="en">genius</dc:title>
</rdf:Description>
will generate the statement
subject URI http://foo.org/
predicate URI http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/
object Literal composed of string "genius" and language "en"
This was always allowed by the existing RDF model and syntax
document; now we are requiring that language information is
preserved. Several major implementations of Dublin Core and RDF
already implement literals with language as part of it.
Dave
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