h-card: Difference between revisions

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(hyphenate date w/o year as that's our convention for better human readability)
m (Minor tweaks to markup and phrasing)
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=== dt-bday ===
=== dt-bday ===
Using truncated representations of dates for birth date is often good practice as noted in [https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6350#section-4.3.1 the vcard spec] eg
Using truncated representations of dates for birth date is often good practice as noted in [https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6350#section-4.3.1 the vcard spec] eg
* 1985-04 for April 1985
* <code>1985-04</code> for April 1985
* 1985 for the year 1985
* <code>1985</code> for the year 1985
* --04-12 for April 12th without specifying a year.
* <code>--04-12</code> for April 12th with no specified year


=== Reserved properties ===
=== Reserved properties ===

Revision as of 17:32, 16 July 2016

<entry-title>h-card</entry-title> Tantek Çelik (Editor)


h-card is a simple, open format for publishing people and organisations on the web. h-card is one of several open microformat draft standards suitable for embedding data in HTML/HTML5.

h-card is the microformats2 update to hCard.

Per CC0, to the extent possible under law, the editors have waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this work. In addition, as of 2024-11-14, the editors have made this specification available under the Open Web Foundation Agreement Version 1.0.

Example

Here is a simple minimal person example:

<a class="h-card" href="http://example.com">Joe Bloggs</a>

Parsed JSON:

{
  "items": [
    {
      "type": [
        "h-card"
      ],
      "properties": {
        "name": [
          "Joe Bloggs"
        ],
        "url": [
          "http://example.com"
        ]
      }
    }
  ]
}

And a slightly more complete example:

<p class="h-card">
  <img class="u-photo" src="http://example.org/photo.png" alt="" />
  <a class="p-name u-url" href="http://example.org">Joe Bloggs</a>
  <a class="u-email" href="mailto:joebloggs@example.com">joebloggs@example.com</a>, 
  <span class="p-street-address">17 Austerstræti</span>
  <span class="p-locality">Reykjavík</span>
  <span class="p-country-name">Iceland</span>
</p>

Parsed JSON:

{
  "items": [
    {
      "type": [
        "h-card"
      ],
      "properties": {
        "photo": [
          "http://example.org/photo.png"
        ],
        "name": [
          "Joe Bloggs"
        ],
        "url": [
          "http://example.org"
        ],
        "email": [
          "mailto:joebloggs@example.com"
        ],
        "street-address": [
          "17 Austerstræti"
        ],
        "locality": [
          "Reykjavík"
        ],
        "country-name": [
          "Iceland"
        ]
      }
    }
  ]
}

Nested h-card example

<div class="h-card">
  <a class="p-name u-url"
     href="http://blog.lizardwrangler.com/" 
    >Mitchell Baker</a> 
  (<a class="p-org h-card" 
      href="http://mozilla.org/"
     >Mozilla Foundation</a>)
</div>

Parsed JSON:

{
  "items": [{ 
    "type": ["h-card"],
    "properties": {
      "name": ["Mitchell Baker"],
      "url": ["http://blog.lizardwrangler.com/"],
      "org": [{
        "value": "Mozilla Foundation",
        "type": ["h-card"],
        "properties": {
          "name": ["Mozilla Foundation"],
          "url": ["http://mozilla.org/"]
        }
      }]
    }
  }]
}

Note: the nested h-card has implied 'name' and 'url' properties, just like any other root-class-name-only h-card on an <a href> would.

Get started

The class h-card is a root class name that indicates the presence of an h-card.

For minimal examples where at most p-name, u-url and u-photo are required (such as the first given above), only the root class name is needed — see implied properties.

For more complex examples, the root class name must be placed on an element which encloses all the desired properties, and then the properties themselves marked up using the classnames given below.

See microformats2-parsing to learn more about property classnames.

Properties

h-card properties, inside an element with class h-card:

  • p-name - The full/formatted name of the person or organisation
  • p-honorific-prefix - e.g. Mrs., Mr. or Dr.
  • p-given-name - given (often first) name
  • p-additional-name - other/middle name
  • p-family-name - family (often last) name
  • p-sort-string - string to sort by
  • p-honorific-suffix - e.g. Ph.D, Esq.
  • p-nickname - nickname/alias/handle
  • u-email - email address
  • u-logo - a logo representing the person or organisation
  • u-photo
  • u-url - home page
  • u-uid - universally unique identifier, typically canonical URL
  • p-category - category/tag
  • p-adr - postal address, optionally embed an h-adr
    Main article: h-adr
  • p-post-office-box
  • p-extended-address - apartment/suite/room name/number if any
  • p-street-address - street number + name
  • p-locality - city/town/village
  • p-region - state/county/province
  • p-postal-code - postal code, e.g. US ZIP
  • p-country-name - country name
  • p-label
  • p-geo or u-geo, optionally embed an h-geo
    Main article: h-geo
  • p-latitude - decimal latitude
  • p-longitude - decimal longitude
  • p-altitude - decimal altitude
  • p-tel - telephone number
  • p-note - additional notes
  • dt-bday - birth date
  • u-key - cryptographic public key e.g. SSH or GPG
  • p-org - affiliated organization, optionally embed an h-card
  • p-job-title - job title, previously 'title' in hCard, disambiguated.
  • p-role - description of role
  • u-impp per RFC4770, new in vCard4 (RFC 6350)
  • p-sex - biological sex, new in vCard4 (RFC 6350)
  • p-gender-identity - gender identity, new in vCard4 (RFC 6350)
  • dt-anniversary

All properties are optional.

Status

h-card is a microformats.org draft specification. Public discussion on h-card takes place on h-card-feedback and the #microformats irc channel on irc.freenode.net.

h-card is ready to use and implemented in the wild, but for backwards compatibility you should also mark up top-level h-cards as classic hCards.

Property Details

(stub, to be expanded)

p-adr

p-adr can optionally embed an h-adr to cluster associated structured address properties. E.g. adding "p-adr" to the example earlier:

<div class="h-card">
  <p class="p-name">Joe Bloggs</p>
  <p class="p-adr h-adr">
    <span class="p-street-address">17 Austerstræti</span>
    <span class="p-locality">Reykjavík</span>
    <span class="p-country-name">Iceland</span>
  </p>
</div>

Q: Why would you use "p-adr" to cluster associated structured address properties?

A: Because if you have more than one structured address, it helps to cluster which properties go with which address, e.g. home vs. work.

p-tel

Note: use of 'value' within 'p-tel' should be automatically handled by the support of the value-class-pattern. And for now, the former hCard 'type' subproperty of 'tel' is dropped/ignored. If there is demonstrable documented need for additional tel types (e.g. fax), we can introduce new flat properties as needed (e.g. p-tel-fax).

dt-bday

Using truncated representations of dates for birth date is often good practice as noted in the vcard spec eg

  • 1985-04 for April 1985
  • 1985 for the year 1985
  • --04-12 for April 12th with no specified year

Reserved properties

Reserved properties (not used much, if at all, in practice):

  • p-organization-name
  • p-organization-unit
  • p-tz - timezone offset, e.g. <data class="p-tz" value="-0800">PST</data>
  • dt-rev

Examples in the wild

Real world in the wild examples:

  • ... add uses of h-card you see in the wild here.
  • App.net rolled out support for h-card and h-entry on all profile pages and permalink pages as of 2013-08-06 (example)
  • Brett Comnes marks up his posts with h-card (example)
  • Ben Werdmuller marks up his homepage and posts with h-card example)
  • Sandeep Shetty marks his homepage and posts up with h-card and h-entry ([sandeep.io/101 example])
  • Laurent Eschenauer marks his homepage profile up using h-card
  • Tom Morris marks himself up with h-card as well as venues he’s checked into (example)
  • W3Conf 2013 uses h-card for all the event speakers and notable attendees. The h-cards make particularly good use of implied name, url, and photo properties.
  • SemPress is a WordPress theme that supports h-card, h-feed/h-entry and h-as-*
  • The Pastry Box Project use h-card markup on their homepage and individual thoughts pages
  • Tom Morris uses h-card and XFN to markup his blogroll.
  • Aaron Parecki uses h-card to markup both authorship and references to people in his notes permalinks, e.g. 2012/230/reply/1.
  • Tantek Çelik uses h-card on his home page as well as within h-entrys on permalink pages to indicate authorship.
  • Barnaby Walters uses h-card on his home page, as well as within h-entries for notes and articles, both to indicate authorship and also when mentioning people within the body of the notes.
  • microformats.org at 7 years presentation with and h-card markup for people and organizations.
  • Rise of the Indie Web hCards (from Personal Democracy Forum 2012 #pdf12 #pdf2012) has microformats2 h-card markup
  • WebMaker by Mozilla has microformats2 h-card on event search (e.g. search near Portland Oregon) and event pages (e.g. IndieWebCamp 2012).[1]
  • WebFWD by Mozilla has microformats2 h-card markup on experts and team pages
  • IndieWebCamp has microformats2 h-event markup with embedded h-cards for the organizers and the location.
  • Mozilla Events page has microformats2 h-event markup with attendees marked up with h-card.
  • Tristan Thomas uses h-card on his home page
  • Cold32.com uses h-card (and h-geo) on its about-the-author-and-contact page
  • Workfrom.co renders h-cards for venues (e.g. [2])
  • PCWDLD.com renders h-cards for download pages(e.g. Download page example)

offline

  • spreadly marks up share permalink pages with minimal h-cards inside h-entry

Validating

Main article: validators

Test and validate microformats2 markup in general with:

Backward Compatibility

Publisher Compatibility

For backward compatibility, you may wish to use classic hCard classnames in addition to the more future-proof h-card properties, for example:

<p class="h-card vcard">
  <span class="p-name fn">Joe Bloggs</span>,
  <span class="p-org org">Awesome Nonprofit</span>
  ...
</p>

The class vcard is a backward compatible root class name that indicates the presence of an hCard.

fn, org, and all the other backward compatibility hCard property class names are listed below.

Parser Compatibility

Microformats parsers SHOULD detect classic properties only if a classic root class name is found and parse them as microformats2 properties.

If an "h-card" is found, don't look for a "vcard" on the same element.

Compat. root class name: vcard
Properties: (parsed as p- plain text unless otherwise specified)

  • fn - parse as p-name
  • honorific-prefix
  • given-name
  • additional-name
  • family-name
  • honorific-suffix
  • nickname
  • email - parse as u-
  • logo - parse as u-
  • photo - parse as u-
  • url - parse as u-
  • uid - parse as u-
  • category
  • adr - parse as p-adr h-adr including compat root class adr
  • extended-address
  • street-address
  • locality
  • region
  • postal-code
  • country-name
  • label
  • geo - parse as p-geo h-geo including compat root class geo
  • latitude
  • longitude
  • tel
  • note
  • bday - parse as dt-
  • key - parse as u-
  • org
  • organization-name
  • organization-unit
  • title - parse as p-job-title
  • role

Reserved: (backward compat properties that parsers MAY implement, if they do, they MUST implement in this way:

  • tz
  • rev - parse as dt-

Background

This work is based on the existing hCard and vcard specifications.

Design Principles

(stub, expand)

Additions

We've tried very hard with h-card to stay compatible with vCard4, and thus additions should be proposed on the vCard4 mailing list.

However, you may still use this wiki to capture additions for h-card here:

See Also