Spellcheck and TriG not Turtle
authorGavin Carothers <gavin@carothers.name>
Wed, 18 Sep 2013 07:55:11 -0700
changeset 1106 c65f4e2234a7
parent 1105 d4c9c7296f9d
child 1107 4a7ad904b5e5
Spellcheck and TriG not Turtle
drafts/trig/Overview.html
trig/index.html
--- a/drafts/trig/Overview.html	Wed Sep 18 07:41:46 2013 -0700
+++ b/drafts/trig/Overview.html	Wed Sep 18 07:55:11 2013 -0700
@@ -393,7 +393,7 @@
 			<!--OddPage--><h2 aria-level="1" role="heading" id="h2_sec-trig-intro"><span class="secno">2. </span>TriG Language</h2><p><em>This section is non-normative.</em></p>
 
 			<p>A TriG document allows writing down an <abbr title="Resource Description Framework">RDF</abbr> Dataset in a compact
-			textual form.  It consists of a sequence of directives, triple statments, graph statements which contain triple-generating statements and optional blank lines.  
+			textual form.  It consists of a sequence of directives, triple statements, graph statements which contain triple-generating statements and optional blank lines.  
 			Comments may be given after a <code>#</code> that is not part of another 
 			lexical token and continue to the end of the line.</p>
 			<p>
@@ -409,7 +409,7 @@
 
 			<section id="sec-triple-statements" typeof="bibo:Chapter" resource="#sec-triple-statements" rel="bibo:chapter">
 				<h3 aria-level="2" role="heading" id="h3_sec-triple-statements"><span class="secno">2.1 </span>Triple Statements</h3><p><em>This section is non-normative.</em></p>
-				<p>As TriG is an extention of the Turtle language it allows for any constructs from the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#language-features">Turtle language</a>. <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#simple-triples">Simple Triples</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#predicate-lists">Predicate Lists</a>, and <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#object-lists">Object Lists</a> can all be used either inside a graph statement, or on their own as in a Turtle document. When outside a graph statement, the triples are considered to be part of the deafult graph of the <abbr title="Resource Description Framework">RDF</abbr> Dataset.</p>
+				<p>As TriG is an extention of the Turtle language it allows for any constructs from the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#language-features">Turtle language</a>. <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#simple-triples">Simple Triples</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#predicate-lists">Predicate Lists</a>, and <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#object-lists">Object Lists</a> can all be used either inside a graph statement, or on their own as in a Turtle document. When outside a graph statement, the triples are considered to be part of the default graph of the <abbr title="Resource Description Framework">RDF</abbr> Dataset.</p>
 			</section>
 
 			<section id="sec-graph-statements" typeof="bibo:Chapter" resource="#sec-graph-statements" rel="bibo:chapter">
@@ -1435,8 +1435,8 @@
           <dt>Security considerations:</dt>
           <dd>TriG is a general-purpose assertion language; applications may evaluate given data to infer more assertions or to dereference IRIs, invoking the security considerations of the scheme for that IRI. Note in particular, the privacy issues in [<cite><a class="bibref" href="#bib-RFC3023">RFC3023</a></cite>] section 10 for HTTP IRIs. Data obtained from an inaccurate or malicious data source may lead to inaccurate or misleading conclusions, as well as the dereferencing of unintended IRIs. Care must be taken to align the trust in consulted resources with the sensitivity of the intended use of the data; inferences of potential medical treatments would likely require different trust than inferences for trip planning.</dd>
 
-          <dd>TriG is used to express arbitrary application data; security considerations will vary by domain of use. Security tools and protocols applicable to text (e.g. PGP encryption, MD5 sum validation, password-protected compression) may also be used on Turtle documents. Security/privacy protocols must be imposed which reflect the sensitivity of the embedded information.</dd>
-          <dd>TriG can express data which is presented to the user, for example, <abbr title="Resource Description Framework">RDF</abbr> Schema labels. Application rendering strings retrieved from untrusted Turtle documents must ensure that malignant strings may not be used to mislead the reader. The security considerations in the media type registration for XML ([<cite><a class="bibref" href="#bib-RFC3023">RFC3023</a></cite>] section 10) provide additional guidance around the expression of arbitrary data and markup.</dd>
+          <dd>TriG is used to express arbitrary application data; security considerations will vary by domain of use. Security tools and protocols applicable to text (e.g. PGP encryption, MD5 sum validation, password-protected compression) may also be used on TriG documents. Security/privacy protocols must be imposed which reflect the sensitivity of the embedded information.</dd>
+          <dd>TriG can express data which is presented to the user, for example, <abbr title="Resource Description Framework">RDF</abbr> Schema labels. Application rendering strings retrieved from untrusted TriG documents must ensure that malignant strings may not be used to mislead the reader. The security considerations in the media type registration for XML ([<cite><a class="bibref" href="#bib-RFC3023">RFC3023</a></cite>] section 10) provide additional guidance around the expression of arbitrary data and markup.</dd>
           <dd>TriG uses IRIs as term identifiers. Applications interpreting data expressed in TriG should address the security issues of
       <a class="norm" href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt">Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs)</a> [<cite><a class="bibref" href="#bib-RFC3987">RFC3987</a></cite>] Section 8, as well as
       <a class="norm" href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt">Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax</a> [<cite><a class="bibref" href="#bib-RFC3986">RFC3986</a></cite>] Section 7.</dd>
--- a/trig/index.html	Wed Sep 18 07:41:46 2013 -0700
+++ b/trig/index.html	Wed Sep 18 07:55:11 2013 -0700
@@ -192,7 +192,7 @@
 			<h2>TriG Language</h2>
 
 			<p>A TriG document allows writing down an RDF Dataset in a compact
-			textual form.  It consists of a sequence of directives, triple statments, graph statements which contain triple-generating statements and optional blank lines.  
+			textual form.  It consists of a sequence of directives, triple statements, graph statements which contain triple-generating statements and optional blank lines.  
 			Comments may be given after a <code>#</code> that is not part of another 
 			lexical token and continue to the end of the line.</p>
 			<p>
@@ -208,7 +208,7 @@
 
 			<section id="sec-triple-statements">
 				<h3>Triple Statements</h3>
-				<p>As TriG is an extention of the Turtle language it allows for any constructs from the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#language-features">Turtle language</a>. <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#simple-triples">Simple Triples</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#predicate-lists">Predicate Lists</a>, and <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#object-lists">Object Lists</a> can all be used either inside a graph statement, or on their own as in a Turtle document. When outside a graph statement, the triples are considered to be part of the deafult graph of the RDF Dataset.</p>
+				<p>As TriG is an extention of the Turtle language it allows for any constructs from the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#language-features">Turtle language</a>. <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#simple-triples">Simple Triples</a>, <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#predicate-lists">Predicate Lists</a>, and <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/turtle/#object-lists">Object Lists</a> can all be used either inside a graph statement, or on their own as in a Turtle document. When outside a graph statement, the triples are considered to be part of the default graph of the RDF Dataset.</p>
 			</section>
 
 			<section id="sec-graph-statements">
@@ -888,8 +888,8 @@
           <dt>Security considerations:</dt>
           <dd>TriG is a general-purpose assertion language; applications may evaluate given data to infer more assertions or to dereference IRIs, invoking the security considerations of the scheme for that IRI. Note in particular, the privacy issues in [[!RFC3023]] section 10 for HTTP IRIs. Data obtained from an inaccurate or malicious data source may lead to inaccurate or misleading conclusions, as well as the dereferencing of unintended IRIs. Care must be taken to align the trust in consulted resources with the sensitivity of the intended use of the data; inferences of potential medical treatments would likely require different trust than inferences for trip planning.</dd>
 
-          <dd>TriG is used to express arbitrary application data; security considerations will vary by domain of use. Security tools and protocols applicable to text (e.g. PGP encryption, MD5 sum validation, password-protected compression) may also be used on Turtle documents. Security/privacy protocols must be imposed which reflect the sensitivity of the embedded information.</dd>
-          <dd>TriG can express data which is presented to the user, for example, RDF Schema labels. Application rendering strings retrieved from untrusted Turtle documents must ensure that malignant strings may not be used to mislead the reader. The security considerations in the media type registration for XML ([[!RFC3023]] section 10) provide additional guidance around the expression of arbitrary data and markup.</dd>
+          <dd>TriG is used to express arbitrary application data; security considerations will vary by domain of use. Security tools and protocols applicable to text (e.g. PGP encryption, MD5 sum validation, password-protected compression) may also be used on TriG documents. Security/privacy protocols must be imposed which reflect the sensitivity of the embedded information.</dd>
+          <dd>TriG can express data which is presented to the user, for example, RDF Schema labels. Application rendering strings retrieved from untrusted TriG documents must ensure that malignant strings may not be used to mislead the reader. The security considerations in the media type registration for XML ([[!RFC3023]] section 10) provide additional guidance around the expression of arbitrary data and markup.</dd>
           <dd>TriG uses IRIs as term identifiers. Applications interpreting data expressed in TriG should address the security issues of
       <a class="norm" href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt">Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs)</a> [[!RFC3987]] Section 8, as well as
       <a class="norm" href="http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3986.txt">Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax</a> [[!RFC3986]] Section 7.</dd>