--- a/dc-note/releases/NOTE-prov-dc-20130430/Overview.html Thu Apr 18 17:58:33 2013 +0200
+++ b/dc-note/releases/NOTE-prov-dc-20130430/Overview.html Thu Apr 18 18:03:41 2013 +0200
@@ -539,7 +539,7 @@
<p>
Many DC terms can be used to describe provenance information about a resource: <i>when</i> it was affected in the past,
<i>who</i> affected it and <i>how</i> it was affected. The rest of the DCMI terms (description metadata), tell us <i>what</i> was affected.
- <a href="#categories">Table 2</a> classifies the DC Terms according to these four categories (<i>what?</i>, <i>who?</i>, <i>when?</i> and <i>how?</i>).
+ <a href="#categories-props">Table 2</a> classifies the DC Terms according to these four categories (<i>what?</i>, <i>who?</i>, <i>when?</i> and <i>how?</i>).
Each category corresponds to the question it answers regarding the description or provenance of a given resource.
The classification is by necessity somewhat minimalistic, as it can be argued that some elements placed in the description metadata terms contain
provenance information as well, depending on their usage. It is worth mentioning that there is no direct information in DC describing
@@ -591,7 +591,7 @@
</p>
<div id="categories-props" >
<table style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;">
- <caption> <a href="#categories"> Table 2:</a> Categorization of the DC Terms (properties) </caption>
+ <caption> <a href="#categories-props"> Table 2:</a> Categorization of the DC Terms (properties) </caption>
<tbody>
<tr>
<th>Category</th>
@@ -643,7 +643,7 @@
</p>
<p>
Regarding the classes in DC terms, most of them can be seen as subclasses of <code>prov:Entities</code> (with some exceptions like <code>dct:Agent</code> or <code>dct:ProvenanceStatement</code>).
- In general, these classes represent types of resources or metadata that can be described with the properties shown in <a href="#categories">Table 2</a>, thus most of them are included in the "Descriptive Metadata" category.
+ In general, these classes represent types of resources or metadata that can be described with the properties shown in <a href="#categories-props">Table 2</a>, thus most of them are included in the "Descriptive Metadata" category.
Although the usage of these classes is reduced when compared to the adoption of the DC term properties, we have also included them as part of the mapping. DCMI Type Vocabulary terms have been
excluded from the mapping, as they are not part of the core vocabulary (using a different namespace URI: <a href="http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/">http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/</a>).
A list of the classes can be seen in <a href="#categories-classes">Table 3</a>.
@@ -788,8 +788,8 @@
the details about the kind of influence that an activity or an agent had are left to custom refinements of the PROV classes and properties.
</p>
<p>
- <a href="#list_of_direct_terms_classes">Table 4</a>, <a href="#list_of_direct_terms_props">Table 5</a>, <a href="#list_of_direct_mappings2_classes">Table 6</a> and <a href="#list_of_direct_mappings2_props">Table 7</a>
- provide the detailed mapping of the classes and properties in DC plus the rationale for each term.
+ <a href="#list_of_direct_terms_props">Table 4</a>, <a href="#list_of_direct_terms_classes">Table 5</a>, <a href="#list_of_direct_mappings2_props">Table 6</a> and <a href="#list_of_direct_mappings2_classes">Table 7</a>
+ provide the detailed mapping of the properties and classes in DC plus the rationale for each term.
The rest of the terms can be found in the
<a href="#list-of-terms-excluded-from-the-mapping">list of terms left out of the mapping</a> section.
</p>