Looking for help!
NAME
SemanticWeb::Schema::Article - An article
VERSION
version v7.0.0
DESCRIPTION
An article, such as a news article or piece of investigative report.
Newspapers and magazines have articles of many different types and this is
intended to cover them all.
See also blog post.
ATTRIBUTES
article_body
articleBody
The actual body of the article.
A article_body should be one of the following types:
Str
_has_article_body
A predicate for the "article_body" attribute.
article_section
articleSection
Articles may belong to one or more 'sections' in a magazine or newspaper, such as Sports, Lifestyle, etc.
A article_section should be one of the following types:
Str
_has_article_section
A predicate for the "article_section" attribute.
backstory
For an Article, typically a NewsArticle, the backstory property provides a textual summary giving a brief explanation of why and how an article was created. In a journalistic setting this could include information about reporting process, methods, interviews, data sources, etc.
A backstory should be one of the following types:
_has_backstory
A predicate for the "backstory" attribute.
page_end
pageEnd
The page on which the work ends; for example "138" or "xvi".
A page_end should be one of the following types:
_has_page_end
A predicate for the "page_end" attribute.
page_start
pageStart
The page on which the work starts; for example "135" or "xiii".
A page_start should be one of the following types:
_has_page_start
A predicate for the "page_start" attribute.
pagination
Any description of pages that is not separated into pageStart and pageEnd; for example, "1-6, 9, 55" or "10-12, 46-49".
A pagination should be one of the following types:
Str
_has_pagination
A predicate for the "pagination" attribute.
speakable
Indicates sections of a Web page that are particularly 'speakable' in
the sense of being highlighted as being especially appropriate for
text-to-speech conversion. Other sections of a page may also be usefully
spoken in particular circumstances; the 'speakable' property serves to
indicate the parts most likely to be generally useful for speech.
The speakable property can be repeated an arbitrary number of
times, with three kinds of possible 'content-locator' values:
1.)
id-value URL references - uses id-value of an element in
the page being annotated. The simplest use of speakable has
(potentially relative) URL values, referencing identified sections of the
document concerned.
2.) CSS Selectors - addresses content in the
annotated page, eg. via class attribute. Use the cssSelector property.
3.) XPaths - addresses content via XPaths (assuming an XML view of the
content). Use the xpath property.
For more
sophisticated markup of speakable sections beyond simple ID references,
either CSS selectors or XPath expressions to pick out document section(s)
as speakable. For this we define a supporting type, SpeakableSpecification
which is defined to be a possible value of the speakable
property.
A speakable should be one of the following types:
_has_speakable
A predicate for the "speakable" attribute.
word_count
wordCount
The number of words in the text of the Article.
A word_count should be one of the following types:
_has_word_count
A predicate for the "word_count" attribute.
SEE ALSO
SemanticWeb::Schema::CreativeWork
SOURCE
The development version is on github at https://github.com/robrwo/SemanticWeb-Schema and may be cloned from git://github.com/robrwo/SemanticWeb-Schema.git
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests on the bugtracker website https://github.com/robrwo/SemanticWeb-Schema/issues
When submitting a bug or request, please include a test-file or a patch to an existing test-file that illustrates the bug or desired feature.
AUTHOR
Robert Rothenberg <rrwo@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2018-2020 by Robert Rothenberg.
This is free software, licensed under:
The Artistic License 2.0 (GPL Compatible)