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Processing link structures and linkbases on the web
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Source International World Wide Web Conference archive
Special interest tracks and posters of the 14th international conference on World Wide Web table of contents
Chiba, Japan
POSTER SESSION: Posters table of contents
Pages: 1030 - 1031  
Year of Publication: 2005
ISBN:1-59593-051-5
Authors
François Bry  University of Munich
Michael Eckert  University of Munich
Sponsor
ACM: Association for Computing Machinery
Publisher
ACM  New York, NY, USA
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Downloads (6 Weeks): 7,   Downloads (12 Months): 27,   Citation Count: 1
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ABSTRACT

Hyperlinks are an essential feature of the World Wide Web, highly responsible for its success. XLink improves on HTML's linking capabilities in several ways. In particular, links after XLink can be "out-of-line" (i.e., not defined at a link source) and collected in (possibly several) linkbases, which considerably ease building complex link structures.Modeling of link structures and processing of linkbases under the Web's "open world linking" are aspects neglected by XLink. Adding a notion of "interface" to XLink, as suggested in this work, considerably improves modeling of link structures. When a link structure is traversed, the relevant linkbase(s) might become ambiguous. We suggest three linkbase management modes governing the binding of a linkbase to a document to resolve this ambiguity.


REFERENCES

Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.

 
1
F. Bry and M. Eckert. Processing link structures and linkbases and its relevance to the semantic web. Technical report, Institute for Informatics, University of Munich, 2004. http://www.pms.ifi.lmu.de/publikationen/#PMS-FB-2004-25.
2
 
3
S. DeRose, E. Maler, and D. Orchard. XML Linking Language (XLink) Version 1.0. W3C recommendation, World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), June 2001.


Collaborative Colleagues:
François Bry: colleagues
Michael Eckert: colleagues