-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 16
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Registration Request: meta #66
Comments
Hello.
On 2024-08-28 09:29, kibigo! wrote:
The provided reference is the most formal one to my knowledge (§4.6 Linking, near the bottom, describes |rel="meta"| as an alternative to |rel="alternative"| when the metadata resource merely describes, and does not attempt to provide an alternative for, the link’s context).
That latter definition ("the metadata resource merely describes [...] the link's context") sounds exactly what the registered "describedby" link relation type is defining. Is there any difference? If yes, it might be useful to spell that out. If not, it may be useful to clearly say that "meta" is a synonym for "describedby" and that they can be treated interchangeably.
Cheers,
dret.
…--
Erik Wilde | ***@***.*** |
| https://youtube.com/ErikWilde |
|
This is a third-party registration of a value that's mentioned briefly in a very old W3C Interest Group note - any thoughts @plehegar? I also note that the reference doesn't define the semantics; instead, the registration infers them. |
The practical answer here is that Anyway, in case it wasn’t clear, I think the “specification” of The HTML5 link type extensions page cites an old version of RDF/XML as its source for In any case, I think the above history means it would be very problematic if |
Relation Name
meta
Description
Links to a resource containing metadata about the link’s context
Reference
https://www.w3.org/TR/cooluris/#linking
Additional Information
This has been existing practice on the Web for some time. The provided reference is the most formal one to my knowledge (§4.6 Linking, near the bottom, describes
rel="meta"
as an alternative torel="alternative"
when the metadata resource merely describes, and does not attempt to provide an alternative for, the link’s context). Butrel="meta"
is also described in:The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: