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Full Discussion: What Came First?
The Lounge What is on Your Mind? What Came First? Post 302215430 by joeyg on Wednesday 16th of July 2008 09:39:49 AM
Old 07-16-2008
Computer the egg was first

Just think of all the new breeds of animals that were created by the mating of two different species. The chicken egg came about in the same manner - an early unix developer mated with a cat and voila! Resulting in
- nothing every accomplished
- just makes lots of clucking noises while strutting around
- leaves waste matter everywhere; but tries to bury/hide it
- often falls asleep for long periods of time
 
HTML::Microformats::Format::species(3pm)		User Contributed Perl Documentation		  HTML::Microformats::Format::species(3pm)

NAME
HTML::Microformats::Format::species - the species microformat SYNOPSIS
use HTML::Microformats::DocumentContext; use HTML::Microformats::Format::hCard; my $context = HTML::Microformats::DocumentContext->new($dom, $uri); my @objects = HTML::Microformats::Format::species->extract_all( $dom->documentElement, $context); foreach my $species (@objects) { print $species->get_binomial . " "; } DESCRIPTION
HTML::Microformats::Format::species inherits from HTML::Microformats::Format. See the base class definition for a description of property getter/setter methods, constructors, etc. MICROFORMAT
The species documentation at <http://microformats.org/wiki/species> is very sketchy. This module aims to be roughly compatible with the implementation of species in the Operator extension for Firefox, and data published by the BBC and Wikipedia. Here are some brief notes on how is has been impemented: o The root class name is 'biota'. o Important properties are 'vernacular' (alias 'common-name', 'cname' or 'fn'), 'binomial', 'trinomial', 'authority'. o Also recognised are 'class', 'division', 'family', 'genus', 'kingdom', 'order', 'phylum', 'species' and various other ranks. o Because some of these property names are fairly generic, you can alternatively use them in a prefixed form: 'taxo-class', 'taxo-division', etc. o If an element with class 'biota' has no recognised properties within it, the entire contents of the element are taken to be a binomial name. This allows for very simple markup: <i class="biota">Homo sapiens</i> o The meaning of some terminology differs when used by botanists and zoologists. You can add the class 'botany' or 'zoology' to the root element to clarify your usage. e.g. <i class="biota zoology">Homo sapiens</i> An example: <span class="biota zoology"> <i class="binomial"> <span class="genus">Homo</span> <span class="species">sapiens</span> <span class="subspecies">sapiens</span> </i> (<span class="authority">Linnaeus, 1758</span>) a.k.a. <span class="vernacular">Humans</span> </span> RDF OUTPUT
RDF output uses the Biological Taxonomy Vocabulary 0.2 (<http://purl.org/NET/biol/ns#>). BUGS
Please report any bugs to <http://rt.cpan.org/>. SEE ALSO
HTML::Microformats::Format, HTML::Microformats. AUTHOR
Toby Inkster <tobyink@cpan.org>. COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2008-2011 Toby Inkster This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. perl v5.14.2 2011-12-06 HTML::Microformats::Format::species(3pm)
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