RDFa (or Resource Description Framework in Attributes) is a W3C Recommendation that adds a set of attribute-level extensions to HTML, XHTML and various XML-based document types for embedding rich metadata within Web documents. The RDF data-model mapping enables its use for embedding RDF subject-predicate-object expressions within XHTML documents. It also enables the extraction of RDF model triples by compliant user agents.
The RDFa community runs a wiki website to host tools, examples, and tutorials.
RDFa was first proposed by Mark Birbeck in the form of a W3C note entitled XHTML and RDF, which was then presented to the Semantic Web Interest Group at the W3C's 2004 Technical Plenary. Later that year the work became part of the sixth public Working Draft of XHTML 2.0. Although it is generally assumed that RDFa was originally intended only for XHTML 2, in fact the purpose of RDFa was always to provide a way to add a metadata to any XML-based language. Indeed, one of the earliest documents bearing the RDF/A Syntax name has the sub-title A collection of attributes for layering RDF on XML languages. The document was written by Mark Birbeck and Steven Pemberton, and was made available for discussion on October 11, 2004.
As long as I remember
Never have I surrendered
Never said die I stand here
One love one goal
And I'll never give up, never give in. oh no!
Cuz we gotta belive
And I will never stop, fighting to win! come on!
Let's make tonight last forever
Cuz all of us know
It's one love oh oh
One love, one goal!
N' share this moment together
And never let go
We're singing
One! - hey!
Love! - hey!
One love one goal!
I've lost far too many
Times but deep inside me
Hides a great destiny
One love one goal
And I'll never give up, never give in. oh no!
Cuz we've gotta push thru