This document records errata and corrections suggested by the community
in the RDFa specifications as published on the 7 June 2012:
These corrections have no normative status as they have not been
incorporated in the specification through the Recommendation Track
process. Ivan Herman, Semantic Web Activity lead, is the editor of this
document. If you find something in one of the documents listed above that
you believe may be an error and wish to have it recorded here, please post
your discovery to the public-rdfa
mailing list, cc-ing to the editor of this document, Ivan
Herman. The community has the possibility to react on the post and,
typically after 5-6 business days and unless the community strongly
objects for the discovery to be recorded as an official erratum, the entry
is added to this list by the editor.
The errata are separated into three sections, corresponding to the three
parts of the specification.
Editorial comment from Liam Morland
The first line of Example 123 is this:
<p prefix="bibo: http://purl.org/ontology/bibo/ dc: http://purl.org/dc/terms/ typeof="bibo:Chapter">
@prefix
is missing the close quote, which would appear
before " typeof"
. This typo is also present in Examples
124, 126, and 127.
See the error
submission
Syntax typo in the Status section
3rd paragraph in the Status section: " Microsoft, and Yandex. It has recieved received
review".
"inlist" missing
The attribute 'inlist', new for version 1.1, is missing in the table of
'5.1 Metainformation Attributes Collection' as well as in the related
paragraph in section 4
See the error
submission
None at this time.
Editorial comments from Karen Coyle
2.1.1.1 "By using a URL to identify a particular type of title, for
example http://purl.org/dc/terms/title, both humans and machines can
understand that the URL unambiguously refers to the "Date of creation
of the resource", such as a web page." [mixes title and created;
created is probably the better choice.]
Fig 6 caption "We've used a short-hands to label the arrows"[must be
"a short-hand" or "short-hand labels for the arrows"]
below Fig 10 "If the FOAF data was included into each blog item"
-> "If the FOAF data were included in each blog item" were:
subjunctive. somewhat pedantic but grammatically correct. in: in
American English, it's "included in" - sometimes British English uses
different prepositions, and I don't know in this case if they do
Under Fig 11 "Using this approach, it becomes very easy to also add
references to the same data from different blogs:" I believe you mean
"blog posts" - yes? And I also assume that the resource = #me must be
within the same - maybe I missed that, but it would be good to state
that all of this is happening between those tags.
After example 40 "Indeed, let us suppose that Alice would like to set
up a separate index page for all her blogs, and the only information
she would like to put there, as structured data, is references to the
titles." Again, I think this means "blog posts."
See the error
submission