As it stands today, there are two primary approaches to categorizing content for the Web 3.0 objectives. The first is the "bottom up" approach, which involves embedding semantical a
Disclaimer: The following contains quite a bit of technical information and hence may not be very informative for an individual who has not used RDF.Syntax
In introducing Turtle it is necessary to first introduce its established ancestors and nearest kin. Of particular importance is introducing Notation 3 (N3) and N-Triples since Turtle is in essence and extension of N-Triples which in
RDF/XML, the in place XML syntax for RDF, carries with it certain restrictions imposed by the fact that it is written in XML. Furthermore it uses XML Namespaces that prevent it encoding all RDF graphs, for instance some predicate URI. Turtle is no
The following are examples taken from the w3 team's January 14th 2008 submission on Turtle and are useful in understanding how Turtle shortens and simplifies code writing.The following example is related to the URI Reference section on the
The below lists are taken directly from the W3 team submission on Turtle in January 2008. Turtle compared to N-TriplesTurtle as an offshoot of N-Triples adds the following syntax, some of which have been discussed in
RDF is a general purpose language used for representing info on the web. It primarily is used for inputting metadata. A definition for metadata can easily be found but rather than a definition an example is easier to understand. Suppose you find