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  • From: Didier PH Martin <martind@n...>
  • To: Joe English <jenglish@f...>, xml-dev <xml-dev@l...>
  • Date: Sat, 07 Apr 2001 13:45:31 -0400

Hi Joe,

Joe said:
It occurs to me that there's another difference between
XLink and RDF:  XLink "knows about" the internal structure
of XML documents, whereas RDF only "knows about" URIs.
XLink expresses relationships between nodes in documents;
the fact that these nodes may be identified by URIs is
secondary.  RDF expresses relationships between resources,
and the fact that a resource's URI may happen to contain
an XPointer identifying a specific node is completely
irrelevant.

For example, in XLink <URL: http://www.foo.com/doc.xml#bar >
and <URL: http://www.foo.com/doc.xml#xpointer(id('bar')) >
mean the same thing, but in RDF they're different.

Didier replies:
Very good point. So, if we merge both world we may have a link pointing to a
node and this link may convey some information about the pointed node.

cheers
Didier


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