--- a/ldp-ucr.html Thu Aug 22 12:16:06 2013 +0100
+++ b/ldp-ucr.html Thu Aug 22 12:38:59 2013 +0100
@@ -748,7 +748,7 @@
These artefacts will be added to the research object throughout the project lifecycle of the project.
</p>
<p>
- The RDF description below captures the initial state of the research object. For the purposes of the example, we have included the time of creation. It is a linked data resource addressed via URL from which the following RDF can be retrieved. The null-relative '<>' should be understood as a self-reference to the research object itself.
+ The RDF description below captures the initial state of the research object. For the purposes of the example, we have included the time of creation. It is a linked data resource addressed via URL from which the following RDF can be retrieved. The null-relative URL <pre><></pre> should be understood as a self-reference to the research object itself.
</p>
<pre class='example'>
@prefix ro: <http://purl.org/wf4ever/ro#> .
@@ -764,13 +764,12 @@
<section>
<h3 id="scen-create_a_nested_container">Alternative scenario: create a nested container</h3>
<p>
- The motivation for nested containers comes from the <a
- href="#story-oslc" title="Story Tool Integration">
- System and Software Development Tool Integration</a> user story. The
+ The motivation for nested containers comes from the <a>System and Software Development Tool Integration</a> user story. The
OSLC Change Management vocabulary allows bug reports to have
attachments referenced by the membership predicate
- <code>oslc_cm:attachment</code>. This may be viewed as nested containment. The 'top-level-container' contains issues, and
+ <pre>oslc_cm:attachment</pre>. This may be viewed as nested containment. The <pre>top-level-container</pre> contains issues, and
each issue is itself a container of attachments.
+ In the example, <pre>issue1234</pre> is a member of the container <pre>top-level-container<pre>. In turn, <pre>attachment324</pre> and <pre>attachment251</pre> are attachments within <pre>issue1234</pre>. Thinking of these as containers makes it easier to manage them as self-contained units.
</p>
<pre class='example'>
@prefix dcterms: <http://purl.org/dc/terms/>.