This page summarizes the relationships among specifications, whether they are finished standards or drafts. Below, each title
links to the most recent version of a document.
For related introductory information, see: Inference, Linked Data, Meta Formats, Vocabularies.
Completed Work
W3C Recommendations have
been reviewed by W3C Members, by software developers, and by other
W3C groups and interested parties, and are endorsed by the
Director as Web Standards. Learn more about the W3C Recommendation
Track.
Group Notes are not standards and do not
have the same level of W3C endorsement.
Standards
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2004-02-10
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The Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a framework for representing information in the Web.
RDF Concepts and Abstract Syntax defines an abstract syntax on which RDF is based, and which serves to link its concrete syntax to its formal semantics. It also includes discussion of design goals, key concepts, datatyping, character normalization and handling of URI references.
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2004-02-10
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This is a specification of a precise semantics, and corresponding complete systems of inference rules, for the Resource Description Framework (RDF) and RDF Schema (RDFS).
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2004-02-10
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The Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a language for representing information about resources in the World Wide Web. This Primer is designed to provide the reader with the basic knowledge required to effectively use RDF. It introduces the basic concepts of RDF and describes its XML syntax. It describes how to define RDF vocabularies using the RDF Vocabulary Description Language, and gives an overview of some deployed RDF applications. It also describes the content and purpose of other RDF specification documents.
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2004-02-10
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translations
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The Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a general-purpose language for representing information in the Web. This specification describes how to use RDF to describe RDF vocabularies. This specification defines a vocabulary for this purpose and defines other built-in RDF vocabulary initially specified in the RDF Model and Syntax Specification.
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2004-02-10
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2004-02-10
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Group Notes
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2011-03-03
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VoID is an RDF Schema vocabulary for expressing metadata about RDF
datasets. It is intended as a bridge between the publishers and
users of RDF data, with applications ranging from data discovery to
cataloging and archiving of datasets. This document is a detailed
guide to the VoID vocabulary. It describes how VoID can be used to
express general metadata based on Dublin Core, access metadata,
structural metadata, and links between datasets. It also provides
deployment advice and discusses the discovery of VoID descriptions.
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2006-03-14
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This document addresses three questions left unanswered by these
Recommendations: Which URIref should be used to refer to a user defined
datatype? Which values of which XML Schema simple types are the same?
How to use the problematic xsd:duration in RDF and OWL? In addition, we
further describe how to integrate OWL DL with user defined datatypes
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2003-10-10
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This document describes a mechanism for providing a precise
semantics for the Semantic Web Languages (referred to as SWELs from now
on. The purpose of this is to define clearly the consequences and
allowed inferences from constructs in these languages.
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Drafts
Below are draft documents:
other Working Drafts.
Some of these may become Web Standards through the W3C Recommendation Track
process. Others may be published as Group Notes or
become obsolete specifications.
Other Working Drafts
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2012-01-12
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HTML microdata [MICRODATA] is an extension to HTML used to embed
machine-readable data into HTML documents. Whereas the microdata
specification describes a means of markup, the output format is
JSON. This specification describes processing rules that may be
used to extract RDF [RDF-CONCEPTS] from an HTML document containing
microdata.
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2011-08-30
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This document is work in progress towards a revision of the RDF Concepts and Abstract Syntax Recommendation, and is intended to eventually replace that document. It is part of a larger effort to revise the RDF specifications as published in 2004. The most significant changes from the 2004 edition are: modified string literals, a section on skolemization of blank nodes, and many updated references to other specifications (including a change in terminology from “URI references” to “IRIs”). A fuller list of changes that have been made to date is provided in Appendix A. Various areas of work to be tackled in upcoming working drafts are highlighted throughout the document, but should not yet be understood as an exhaustive list.
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2011-08-09
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The Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a general-purpose language
for representing information in the Web.
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2011-05-10
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This is a sample short description for this specification;
over time we will replace this description with a real one.
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