On Sun, Jul 13, 2014 at 8:30 PM, Rintze Zelle <rintze.ze...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Since nobody is responding, my two cents: I would pick option 4 for now.
>
> Rintze
>
> On Wed, Jun 25, 2014 at 1:17 PM, johnmie <miesc...@bizdata.com> wrote:
> > digi-libris Reader <http://digi-libris.com>   can export all Metadata
> of an
> > object including CSL-specific variables (those that cannot be mapped 1:1
> to
> > Dublin Core Terms. e.g. pageRange, event, genre etc.) as XMP sidecar file
> > which can be imported into PDF files (with Acrobat.exe) and which other
> > software might be able to read.
>

Where are these CSL-specific variables coming from? I don't see any CSL
spec (neither CSL documentation, nor CSL JSON format) defining pageRange.


> >
> > Until now we have stored these CSL variables as attribute/value pairs
> under
> > custom entries which appear in Acrobat.exe under /File >> Properties >>
> > Additional Metadata >> Advanced/ and are stored in the XMP file as
> >
> > /<rdf:Description rdf:about="" xmlns:pdfx="http://ns.adobe.com/pdfx/1.3/
> ">
> > <pdfx:citation_pageRange>7-9</pdfx:citation_pageRange>
> > </rdf:Description>/
> >
> > I am now considering changing this to include a proper CSL namespace
> which
> > could look line
> > /
> > <rdf:Description rdf:about="" xmlns:cs="http://purl.org/net/xbiblio/csl/
> ">
> > <cs:pageRange>7-9</cs:pageRange>
> > </rdf:Description>/
> >
> > but unfortunately this URL returns a 404 error or automatically
> re-directs
> > you to http://citationstyles.org. No way to see a list of variables.
>

Namespaces are not required to resolve to a valid page (I agree that it may
be useful though). For all intents and purposes they're just some
globally-unique string.


> >
> > What do you recommend:
> >
> >    1 stay with pdfx
> >    2 change to xbiblio even though the latter does not reveal a valid
> > namespace
> >    3 register a new domain with purl.org (under purl.org/digi/csl/ or
> > similar)
> >    4 as nbr 3 above but use a proprietary prefix (e.g. digicita: or
> similar)
> > ?
>
>
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