After this tutorial, you should be able to: 1) Formally understand RDF statements, including objects as resources and literals; 2) Write basic RDF documents in RDF/XML; 3) Understand how RDF identifies resources using URIs; 4) Understand why RDF is ideal for what it is built for- exchanging informationglobally.
URL: http://www.linkeddatatools.com/introducing-rdf-part-2
Keywords: HTTP URIs, RDF/XML, Triple
Author: LinkedDataTools.com
Date created: 2009-01-01 07:00:00.000
Language: http://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/iso639-2/eng
Time required: P15M
Educational audience: student
Interactivity type: expositive
- Expresses data in serializations such as RDF/XML, N-Triples, Turtle, N3, Trig, JSON-LD, and RDFa.
- Knows the subject-predicate-object component structure of a triple.
- Understands how a namespace, informally used in the RDF context for a namespace URI or RDF vocabulary, fundamentally differs from the namespace of data attributes and functions (methods) defined for a
- Understands that URIs and literals denote things in the world ("resources") real, imagined, or conceptual.
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