Two example pages: <html> <title>Page 1</title> <link rel="next" rev="prev" href="page-2"> <body> <div class="hentry"> <h1 class="entry-title">Entry 1</h1> <p class="entry-content">Content.</p> </div> </body> </html>
<html> <title>Page 2</title> <link rel="prev" rev="next" href="page-1"> <body> <div class="hentry"> <h1 class="entry-title">Entry 2</h1> <p class="entry-content">Content.</p> </div> </body> </html> As I understand the semantics of next/prev, they indicate links to separate resources - not a continuation of the current resource. i.e. These pages represent two separate feeds, each of which contains a single entry. The reason some XFN parsers will recurse to rel="me next" and rel="me prev" links is not the next/prev relations, but rel="me" -- they can spider rel="me" links (presumably constrained to a particular depth limit) and consolidate the information into a single unified profile. -Toby _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list microformats-discuss@microformats.org http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss