As for someone who might want to do this programmatically, he/she should
take a look at the "Programming languages" section of the second link I
sent along:
http://schema.rdfs.org/tools.html
There one can find Ruby, Python, and Java extractors and parsers capable
of outputting RDF. A developer can take one of these and
programmatically get at the data.
Apologies if I am misunderstanding your intent.
Yours,
Kevin
On 07/10/2012 04:34 PM, Karen Coyle wrote:
> Thanks, Kevin! And Richard!
>
> I'm thinking we need a good web site with links to tools. I had already
> been introduced to
>
> http://www.w3.org/2012/pyRdfa/
>
> where you can past a URI and get ttl or rdf/xml. These are all good
> resources. But what about someone who wants to do this programmatically,
> not through a web site? Richard's message indicates that this isn't yet
> available, so perhaps we should be gathering use cases to support the
> need? And have a place to post various solutions, even ones that are not
> OCLC-specific? (Because I am hoping that the use of microformats will
> increase in general.)
>
> kc
>
>
> On 7/10/12 12:12 PM, Kevin Ford wrote:
>> > is there an open search to get one to the desired records in the first
>> > place?
>> -- I'm not certain this will fully address your question, but try
>> these two sites:
>>
>> Website: http://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/richsnippets
>> Example: http://tinyurl.com/dx3h5bg
>>
>> Website: http://linter.structured-data.org/
>> Example: http://tinyurl.com/bmm8bbc
>>
>> These sites will extract the data, but I don't think you get your
>> choice of serialization. The data are extracted and displayed on the
>> resulting page in the HTML, but at least you can *see* the data.
>>
>> Additionally, there are a number of "tools" to help with microdata
>> extraction here:
>>
>> http://schema.rdfs.org/tools.html
>>
>> Some of these will allow you to output specific (RDF) serializations.
>>
>>
>> HTH,
>>
>> Kevin
>>
>>
>> On 07/10/2012 02:42 PM, Karen Coyle wrote:
>>> I have demonstrated the schema.org/RDFa microdata in the WC database to
>>> various folks and the question always is: how do I get access to this?
>>> (The only source I have is the Facebook API, me being a "user" rather
>>> than a "maker".) The microdata is CC-BY once you get a Worldcat URI, but
>>> is there an open search to get one to the desired records in the first
>>> place? I'm poorly-versed in WC APIs so I'm hoping others have a better
>>> grasp.
>>>
>>> @rjw: the OCLC website does a thorough job of hiding email addresses or
>>> I would have asked this directly. Then again, a discussion here could
>>> have added value.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> kc
>>>
>
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