--- a/ldp-ucr.html Fri Aug 23 14:49:55 2013 +0100
+++ b/ldp-ucr.html Fri Aug 23 15:05:48 2013 +0100
@@ -733,6 +733,7 @@
<section id="s1.1">
<h3>Primary scenario: create a container</h3>
+ <div>(see functional requirement <a>F1.1</a>)</div>
<p>
Create a new container resource within the LDP server. In <a>Services Supporting the Process of Science</a>,
<a
@@ -930,8 +931,7 @@
title="http://www.epimorphics.com/public/vocabulary/org.html"
rel="nofollow">organizational ontology</a>.
</p>
- <p>Note that the example below defines two resources (shown as
- Examples 4 and 5 below) that would be hosted on an LDP server based at
+ <p>Examples 4 and 5 below define two resources that would be hosted on an LDP server based at
<http://example.com/>. The representation in Example 4 describes <http://example.com/member1>, while that of Example 5 describes <http://example.com/role>.
A client reading Example 4 would have to separately retrieve Example 5 in order to get role information such as its descriptive label.
</p>
@@ -1400,9 +1400,9 @@
Clients submit a non-RDF representation to a container in a media
type accepted by that container. The container creates a URI to
represent this media resource, and creates a link from the
- container to the new URI.The media resource may have an explicit
- representation of the media type. It should be possible to find
- the metadata about such a resource and to access and edit it in
+ container to the new URI. The media resource may be accompanied by an explicit RDF
+ description of the media. It should be possible to find the
+ metadata about such a resource and to access and edit it in
the usual ways.
</p>
<p>
@@ -1414,7 +1414,7 @@
@prefix ma: <http://www.w3.org/ns/ma-ont#> .
<dataset> a ma:Collection ;
- :hasMember <dataset/image1.jpg>
+ ma:hasMember <dataset/image1.jpg>
<dataset/image1.jpg> a ma:MediaResource ;
ma:hasFormat "image/jpeg" .
@@ -1424,7 +1424,7 @@
<section id="s9.2">
<h3>Alternative scenario: media-resource attachments</h3>
<p>
- A resource may have multiple <i>renditions</i>; the idea that you
+ A resource may have multiple <i>renditions</i>. For example, you
can have a PDF and a JPEG representing the same thing. A user is
trying to create a work order along with an attached image showing
a faulty machine part. To the user and to the work order system,