I've recently started to look into using some microformats on one of my projects and have been playing with Operator to get an idea of how they are being used elsewhere.
Operator is a great way to see what microformats are contained on a page, but I think it might confuse the average user when a page contains a lot of nested data using core microformats such as hCard, adr, hCalendar, etc. For example on a LinkedIn public profile: http://www.linkedin.com/in/steveganz You see 1 hResume, 1 adr, 10 hCard's, and 7 hCalendar's. In this case all the hCalendar events are from the experience part of the resume. I don't see any use for adding these to Google Calendar or exporting them. Also 9 of the hCard's wouldn't make sense to export or add to Yahoo Contacts since they contain only very basic information. An other example is a Google Maps search. In this case each result produces a hCard and contains an adr. Ideally these would be combined and shown as Contacts with addresses. Then each contact could be exported or viewed in Google or Yahoo maps. Have these types of issues been discussed before? Is there a way that a user script can hide nested data? I understand the value of reusing the core microformats and creating composite microformats. I think that in many cases users will want to interact with the primary composite format while still preforming actions based on the nested content. _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list microformats-discuss@microformats.org http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss