On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 1:08 PM, Sylvester Keil <[email protected]> wrote:
> I started an informal Wiki page on the schema repository here:
>
> https://github.com/citation-style-language/schema/wiki/Processor-input-%28JSON%29
>
> On Nov 5, 2011, at 5:43 PM, Bruce D'Arcus wrote:
>
>> On Sat, Nov 5, 2011 at 12:15 PM, Sylvester Keil <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Right, I'll do the latter and post the link here later on.
>>
>> Great.
>>
>> FWIW, IF we want the possibility to use CSL JSON more widely (say as
>> microdata in HTML5?), we might want to adopt camel casing as the
>> preferred convention. If we did that, it would be easy enough to map
>> to CSL terms, where upper letters just get lower-cased and prepended
>> with a dash.
>
> Yes absolutely – although I personally, irrationally, dislike camelCase 
> (PascalCase is fine) ;-)

Where camel casing is used, pascal casing is often used to distinguish
classes. This is common in the RDF world, where you might have an item
with a class like "EditedBook", but properties like "isPartOf".

But CSL is an awfully simple model. Still, that might be the way to go
in distinguishing types and properties.

Bruce

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