Hi all,
I've just noticed the mappings wiki page for Serbian is there, but I
don't see a way to edit it, so I'm assuming I'm lacking the privileges.
Would anyone be kind enough to grant me the editor rights for it (user:
uros.milosevic)? Thanks in advance.
Best,
Uros Milosevic
On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 9:53 AM, Uros Milosevic uros.milose...@pupin.rswrote:
Hi all,
I've just noticed the mappings wiki page for Serbian is there, but I don't
see a way to edit it, so I'm assuming I'm lacking the privileges. Would
anyone be kind enough to grant me the editor rights for it
On Sat, Dec 21, 2013 at 4:36 PM, Andy Mabbett a...@pigsonthewing.org.ukwrote:
Am I right in thinking that DBpedia exposes people's VIAF identifiers?
And does that from the {{Authority control}} template on the Engklish
(and other) Wikiepdia?
Does it also expose ORCID identifiers, and if not,
Great Dimitris :-)
Uros if you need help with the statistics please let us know. Great to see
mappings in a new language!
On 23 Dec 2013 07:30, Dimitris Kontokostas jimk...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Uros,
Sorry for the delay but we had some technical problems.
Mappings are now enabled for Serbian
You didn't tell us in which part of the response you encountered this
string, but I assume it was part of a http://dbpedia.org/resource/ URI. In
that case, it's not a bug. %C5%84 is the URI-escape sequence for the
non-ASCII character ń. DBpedia English uses URIs, not IRIs. URIs must not
contain
Anyway to convert Unicode to normal characters like e with the two dots
should be converted to the normal e ?
On Mon, Dec 23, 2013 at 10:39 PM, Jona Christopher Sahnwaldt
j...@sahnwaldt.de wrote:
You didn't tell us in which part of the response you encountered this
string, but I assume it
Why would you want to do this? In most cases, it doesn't make sense. But I
guess there are ways to do this in most programming languages. collation
is a technique that may be useful. This is not specific to DBpedia, so
you're probably better off looking elsewhere.
On Dec 23, 2013 11:41 PM, Ali