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Re:
> I'd say it's the element's context that decides whether
> [...] is a data or a metadata element.
Could be true. It's also true that what is "metadata"
within the context of an authored document may be
"data" from the perspective of a reader/user of the
document, even if the author's (or document's) perspective
is otherwise. I think it was Steve DeRose who said
in my hearing:
"Your metadata will always be someone else's data."
Cheers,
Robin
-----------------------------------------------------
Robin Cover
XML Cover Pages
WWW: http://xml.coverpages.org
Newsletter: http://xml.coverpages.org/newsletter.html
On Wed, 25 Jun 2003, Gustaf Liljegren wrote:
> I've heard some people say that the markup is by itself metadata, that an
> element's name is metadata, because it describes the element's content:
>
> <reporter> <-- This is metadata
> John Smith <-- This is data
> </reporter>
>
> Isn't this wrong? Comparing to what I learned from Dublin Core, metadata is
> data too. It's not just the name of a property. I'd say it's the element's
> context that decides whether <reporter> is a data or a metadata element.
>
> <reporter> <-- This is just the name of a property
> John Smith <-- This may be metadata, depending on the element's context
> </reporter>
>
> Is this the right way to think about metadata in XML?
>
> Gustaf
>
>
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