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What should a Multipart HTTP request with multiple files look like? RFC1341(MIME) : 7 The Multipart content type. Turtle - Terse RDF Triple Language. Abstract The Resource Description Framework (RDF) is a general-purpose language for representing information in the Web. This document defines a textual syntax for RDF called Turtle that allows RDF graphs to be completely written in a compact and natural text form, with abbreviations for common usage patterns and datatypes.

Turtle provides levels of compatibility with the existing N-Triples and Notation 3 formats as well as the triple pattern syntax of the SPARQL W3C Proposed Recommendation. This document specifies a language that is in common usage under the name "Turtle". It is intended to be compatible with, and a subset of, Notation 3. Status of this Document This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. This 14 January 2008 W3C Team Submission documents the currently deployed Turtle language, an alternative syntax to RDF/XML. By publishing this document, David Beckett and Tim Berners-Lee have made a formal submission to W3C for discussion. 1. 2. 3. WSMO-Lite: Lightweight Semantic Descriptions for Services on the Web. Abstract In this document we define a lightweight set of semantic service descriptions in RDFS that can be used for annotations of various WSDL elements using the SAWSDL annotation mechanism.

These annotations cover functional, behavioral, nonfunctional and information semantics of Web services, and are intended to support tasks such as (semi-)automatic discovery, negotiation, composition and invocation of services. We exploit RDF and RDFS as well as their various extensions such as OWL and RIF for semantic service descriptions. Status of this document This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. By publishing this document, W3C acknowledges that the Submitting Members have made a formal Submission request to W3C for discussion. Table of Contents 1. In 2007, the W3C finished its work on Semantic Annotations for WSDL and XML Schema (SAWSDL). 2. 2.1 Syntactic Level 2.2 Semantic Level 3. 4.

Figure 1. 5. Semantic Web Services Framework (SWSF) Overview. DRAFT Version 1.1 Authors: Steve Battle (Hewlett Packard) Abraham Bernstein (University of Zurich) Harold Boley (National Research Council of Canada) Benjamin Grosof (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Michael Gruninger (NIST) Richard Hull (Bell Labs Research, Lucent Technologies) Michael Kifer (State University of New York at Stony Brook) David Martin (SRI International) Sheila McIlraith (University of Toronto) Deborah McGuinness (Stanford University) Jianwen Su (University of California, Santa Barbara) Said Tabet (The RuleML Initiative) Copyright © 2005 retained by the authors. All Rights Reserved. Abstract This document provides an overview of the Semantic Web Services Framework (SWSF), which includes the Semantic Web Services Language (SWSL) and the Semantic Web Services Ontology (SWSO).

Status of this document Table of contents 1 Introduction to SWSL and SWSO 2 Document Roadmap 3 Acknowledgements 4 Glossary 5 References This report presents two major components: SAWSDL Candidate Recommendation Implementation Report. See also the Test Suite. The following is a list of SAWSDL features that we test for: The criteria for moving on to Proposed Recommendation are: At least two parsers and at least one generator tool that implements SAWSDL over WSDL 2.0. At least one parser that implements SAWSDL over WSDL 1.1. At least one parser that implements the attrExtensions element. In the following table, we show what implementations provide or use what features.

Key: Green means this column in this category is done, Yellow means this impl has it right, but more impls are needed, and Red means the impl does not have this feature and the we need it for moving out of CR. Footnotes: CR criteria requires support for SAWSDL, not additional extensions. Copyright © 2006 W3C® (MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved. Semantic Annotations for WSDL Working Group. This page summarizes the work of the Semantic Annotations for WSDL (SAWSDL) Working Group which was started by W3C in April 2006 and finished in August 2007, after developing a mechanism to enable semantic annotation of Web services descriptions in WSDL 2.0.

Publications The SAWSDL Working Group has produced the following documents: SAWSDL Recommendation Working Group Note Semantic Annotations for WSDL and XML Schema — Usage Guide (Working Group Note, 28 August 2007) See a listing of related materials below on this page. Overview The Web Services Description Language (WSDL) specifies a way to describe the abstract functionalities of a service and concretely how and where to invoke it.

The Semantic Annotations for WSDL and XML Schema (SAWSDL) W3C Recommendation defines mechanisms using which semantic annotations can be added to WSDL components. Based on member submission WSDL-S, the key design principles for SAWSDL are: Charter and Participation Issues Lists Tutorials Articles and Presentations M. OASIS CAM v1.1 and W3C Schema v1.1 Insights. WSML - Web Service Modeling Language.