hcalendar-intro: Difference between revisions
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(note to editors - messy cludge for dtend - suggestsions?) | (note to editors - messy cludge for dtend - suggestsions?) | ||
(The "+01:00" at the end of the time is the offset from GMT/UDT, indicating, in this case, British Summer Time, but it could just as easily be adjusted to indicate New York or Tokyo time.) | (The "+01:00" at the end of the time is the offset from GMT/UDT, indicating, in this case, British Summer Time, but it could just as easily be adjusted to indicate, say, New York or Tokyo time.) | ||
You can do more, and more complex, things with hCalendar, too, such as xxxx, xxx and marking-up the venue as an [[hCard]]. | You can do more, and more complex, things with hCalendar, too, such as xxxx, xxx and marking-up the venue as an [[hCard]]. |
Revision as of 10:32, 19 September 2006
This page is currently a working draft
hCalendar is a method for adding additional mark-up to a page which contains details of one or more events, so that the event(s) can be identified by software, and indexed, searched or download separately from the page itself. The events can be concert listings, conference sessions, class timetabels - anything!
Suppose, for instance, that you're a fan of a professional sports team, which has twenty-odd matches in a season. Just before the start of the season, they post on their website a list of those matches, with dates, start times (which vary), venues, some notes (say, the type of match - league ("Football League Championship"), cup or friendly) and the opponents.
To add these to your diary or calendar programme (Outlook, Lotus Notes, or iCalendar, for example) you have to cut and paste each one, a piece at a time – first the date then the start time, then the venue, then the opponent (as the event title or summary), the notes and so on. Even though each match lasts two hours, you also have to calculate the ed time for each. It takes you an hour or two, to add all the events to your diary.
Wouldn't it be better if you could just click one button in your browser, or follow one link, and be offered the option to add some or all of the events to your dairy, in one go? Well, that's what hCalendar does.
Example
For instance, here's the (hypothetical) markup for a match from West Bromwich Albion's website:
<tr> <td>Sat 23 September</td> <td>3pm</td> <td>Away: Kenilworth Road Stadium</td> <td><a href="http://www.lutontown.co.uk/">Luton Town</a></td> <td><abbr title="Football League Championship">FLC</abbr></td> </tr>
And here it is, marked up as a hCalendar event
<tr vevent> <td><abbr class="dtend" title="2006-09-23T17:00+01:00">Sat 23 September</abbr></td> <td><abbr class="dtstart" title="2006-09-23T15:00+01:00">3pm</abbr></td> <td>Away: <span class="location">Kenilworth Road Stadium</span></td> <td class="summary"><a class="url" href="http://www.lutontown.co.uk/">Luton Town</a></td> <td><abbr class="description" title="Football League Championship">FLC</abbr></td> </tr>
(note to editors - messy cludge for dtend - suggestsions?)
(The "+01:00" at the end of the time is the offset from GMT/UDT, indicating, in this case, British Summer Time, but it could just as easily be adjusted to indicate, say, New York or Tokyo time.)
You can do more, and more complex, things with hCalendar, too, such as xxxx, xxx and marking-up the venue as an hCard.
Using HCalendar events
To make use of events marked up with hCalendar, you will need to use a browser which understands them, such as Firefox with the Tails-Export extension, or to visit a website which can decode them, such as the Technorati hCal events tools.
The West Midland Bird Club has a page of events marked up with hCalendar which can be downloaded to your calendar via this link - try it (you can always cancel, rather than save, them).
See also
hCalendar The formal specification.