Sorry I'm coming in with another question:
Do you consider that http://schema.org/Thing/name and http://schema.org/CreativeWork/name
š
as two distinct properties?
-Adrian
On 5/10/2012 11:29 AM, åÇÏÒ áÎÔÏÎÏ× wrote:Does it actually means, that there is no conflicting property names in different types yet?Shouldn't we use http://schema.org/ + class name + property name to make properties URIs really U?š10.05.2012, 12:31, "Dan Brickley" <danbri@danbri.org>:On 10 May 2012 09:36, Adrian Giurca <giurca@tu-cottbus.de> wrote:
šDear Dan,
šIs it any ongoing discussion šwith respect of defining URIs for property
šnames? Actually Schema.org defines some property names the same as some
šclass names (such as aggregateRating vs AggregateRating). I would say that
šURIs and/or qualified names may not necessarily be directly used by the
šwebmasters but they are useful to be defined. šOf course a web server may
šconsider case sensitive URLs but maybe an agreement šon defining URIs is
šmuch useful.If you need a URI for a schema.org property, compose it using
'http://schema.org/' + 'aggregateRating'.
It is not ideal that we have some cases where a class and property
name differ only in capitalization, and we should avoid that in
future. We do stick to the rule that an initial upper case is a type,
and an initial lowercase means a property, and both Microdata and RDFa
Lite have different notations for classes and properties, so this is
not technically ambiguous. But it can be confusing, I agree.
At some point it is reasonable to expect us to publish per-property
pages on schema.org too.
cheers,
Dan