RDF::Microdata reader/writer

Microdata parser for RDF.rb.

DESCRIPTION

RDF::Microdata is a Microdata reader for Ruby using the RDF.rb library suite.

FEATURES

RDF::Microdata parses Microdata into statements or triples using the rules defined in Microdata RDF.

  • Microdata parser.

  • Uses Nokogiri for parsing HTML

Install with ‘gem install rdf-microdata’

Living implementation

Microdata to RDF transformation is undergoing active development. This implementation attempts to be up-to-date as of the time of release, and is being used in developing the Microdata RDF specification.

This implementation includes support for the proposed <code>@itemprop-reverse</code>[https://www.w3.org/wiki/WebSchemas/InverseProperties#Proposed_Action:New_attribute.40itemprop-reverse] attribute.

Microdata Registry

The parser uses a build-in version of the Microdata RDF registry.

Usage

Reading RDF data in the Microdata format

require 'rdf/microdata'
graph = RDF::Graph.load("etc/doap.html", format: :microdata)

Reading using content-negotation

require 'rdf/microdata'
graph = RDF::Graph.load("etc/doap.html", content_type: "text/html")

Note

This spec is based on the W3C HTML Data Task Force specification and does not support GRDDL-type triple generation, such as for html>head>title anchor tags.

If the RDFa parser is available, RDF::Microdata::Format will not assert content type text/html or file extension .html, as this is also asserted by RDFa. Instead, the RDFa reader will invoke the microdata reader if an @itemscope attribute is detected.

Dependencies

Documentation

Full documentation available on Rubydoc.info

Principle Classes

RDFa-based Reader

There is an experimental reader based on transforming Microdata to RDFa within the DOM. To invoke this, add the rdfa: true option to the RDF::Microdata::Reader.new, or use RDF::Microdata::RdfaReader directly.

The reader exposes a #rdfa method, which can be used to retrieve the transformed HTML+RDFa

Resources

Author

Contributing

  • Do your best to adhere to the existing coding conventions and idioms.

  • Don’t use hard tabs, and don’t leave trailing whitespace on any line.

  • Do document every method you add using YARD annotations. Read the tutorial or just look at the existing code for examples.

  • Don’t touch the .gemspec, VERSION or AUTHORS files. If you need to change them, do so on your private branch only.

  • Do feel free to add yourself to the CREDITS file and the corresponding list in the the README. Alphabetical order applies.

  • Do note that in order for us to merge any non-trivial changes (as a rule of thumb, additions larger than about 15 lines of code), we need an explicit public domain dedication on record from you, which you will be asked to agree to on the first commit to a repo within the organization. Note that the agreement applies to all repos in the Ruby RDF organization.

License

This is free and unencumbered public domain software. For more information, see unlicense.org/ or the accompanying UNLICENSE file.

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