--- a/rdf-primer/index.html Tue Feb 18 02:06:37 2014 +0100
+++ b/rdf-primer/index.html Tue Feb 18 02:38:42 2014 +0100
@@ -126,7 +126,7 @@
specification of RDF 1.1 the reader is referred to the RDF
1.1. Concepts and Abstract Syntax document [[RDF11-CONCEPTS]].</p>
</section>
-</div>
+
<section id="section-Introduction">
<h2>Introduction</h2>
@@ -157,7 +157,7 @@
For example, retrieving <code>http://www.example.org/bob#me</code>
could provide data about Bob, including the fact that he
knows Alice, as identified by her IRI (an IRI is an "International
- Resource Identifier"; see <a href="#section-IRI">Sec. 3.2</a> for details).
+ Resource Identifier"; see <a href="#section-IRI">Sec. 3.2</a> for details).
Retrieving Alice's IRI could then provide more data about her, including links
to other datasets for her friends, interests, etc. A person or
an automated process can then follow such links and aggregate data about these
@@ -264,7 +264,7 @@
<Bob> <is a> <person>.
<Bob> <is a friend of> <Alice>.
<Bob> <is born on> <the 4th of July 1990>.
-turtle <Bob> <is interested in> <the Mona Lisa>.
+ <Bob> <is interested in> <the Mona Lisa>.
<the Mona Lisa> <was created by> <Leonardo da Vinci>.
<the video 'La Joconde à Washington'> <is about> <the Mona Lisa>
</pre>
@@ -304,7 +304,7 @@
produce exactly the same graph from the perspective of the
abstract syntax. The semantics of RDF graphs [[RDF11-MT]] are defined in
terms of this abstract syntax. Concrete RDF syntax is introduced
- later in <a href="#section-graph-syntax">Sec. 5</a>.</p>
+ later in <a href="#section-graph-syntax">Sec. 5</a>.</p>
<p>In the next three subsections we discuss the three types of RDF data
that occur in triples: IRIs, literals and blank nodes. </p>
@@ -502,7 +502,7 @@
<figcaption>Informal graph of the sample dataset</figcaption>
</figure>
- <p><a href="#section-trig">Sec. 5.2</a> provides an example
+ <p><a href="#section-trig">Sec. 5.1.3</a> provides an example
of concrete syntax for this graph.</p>
</section>
@@ -592,7 +592,7 @@
<p class="note">The syntactic form (second column) is in a prefix
notation wich is discussed in more detail in
-<a href="#section-graph-syntax">Sec. 5</a>.
+<a href="#section-graph-syntax">Sec. 5</a>.
The fact that the constructs have two different prefixes
(<code>rdf:</code> and <code>rdfs:</code>) is a somewhat annoying
historical artefact, which is preserved for backward
@@ -693,7 +693,7 @@
<p>N-Triples [[N-TRIPLES]] provides a simple line-based, plain-text way for serializing RDF
graphs. Each line represents an RDF triple. The informal graph in <a
-href"#fig1">Fig. 1</a> can be represented in N-Triples in the
+href="#fig1">Fig. 1</a> can be represented in N-Triples in the
following way:</p>
<pre class="example" id="n-triples-example">
@@ -706,7 +706,7 @@
07 <http://data.europeana.eu/item/04802/243FA8618938F4117025F17A8B813C5F9AA4D619> <http://purl.org/dc/terms/subject> <http://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q12418> .
</pre>
-<p>Full IRIs are enclosed in angle brackets
+<p>In N-Triples each line represents a triple. Full IRIs are enclosed in angle brackets
(<code><></code>). The period at the end of the line signals the
end of the triple.</p>
@@ -902,7 +902,7 @@
<section id="section-n-quads">
-<h4>N-Quads</h5>
+<h4>N-Quads</h4>
<p>N-Quads [[N-QUADS]] is a simple extension to N-Triples to enable the exchange of RDF
datasets. N-Quads allows one to add a fourth element to a line, capturing
@@ -1222,11 +1222,11 @@
</dl>
</section>
-<section id="section-other-syntaxes" class="appendix">
+<section id="appendix-other-syntaxes" class="appendix">
<h2>More examples of RDF syntaxes</h2>
-<p>In <a href="#section-graph-syntax">Sec. 5</a> the
+<p>In <a href="#section-graph-syntax">Sec. 5</a> the
Turtle family of RDF languages and JSON-LD were introduced.
This appendix lists
corresponding examples for two other RDF syntaxes, namely RDFa and