[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: SkunkLink: a skunkworks XML linking proposal
My two cents on SkunkLink and the potential future directions of linking in XML, which recapitulates something I said in the Linking Town Hall in Baltimore: An important recurring theme in this thread has been the need for modularization in linking markup, and I hope that this idea doesn't fade away. At its core, a link only needs a single piece of information: the locator for a remote resource. If that's all there is, the resource holding it is the implied other end of the relationship being expressed, and you have a link: <para>Check <link>http://www.cnn.com/WEATHER</link> before you fly to Los Angeles.</para> I'll admit, before Len points it out, that for better or worse this particular URI itself carries some additional semantic information; you don't have to follow it to get an idea of where it goes. Still, of all the people saying "I've stripped down linking to its essentials," I'm shooting for the "most stripped-down" prize. Now, most will agree, if not insist, that a linking architecture needs more than just locators. It needs a few more things. What things? I have my own opinion, which I will keep to myself for now. Micah has published his idea of what they are (three of xlink:show's five values: replace, embed, and none. Just kidding.) Simon has alluded to a work in progress. What I'd really like to see is that once everyone submits their ideas about the most important metadata to carry with a link, we group this metadata into functional categories and then raise the discourse to a level that addresses those categories, particularly their dependency relationships. That would be the beginnings of a real linking architecture, and something that could be implemented as a modular spec that could more easily serve a lot of needs without overwhelming anyone. (Wouldn't it have been great if W3C Schema had done that?) Bob DuCharme www.snee.com/bob <bob@ snee.com> "The elements be kind to thee, and make thy spirits all of comfort!" Anthony and Cleopatra, III ii (NOTE: bobdc e-mail address used only for mailing lists)
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