In the current "unstable" specification the JSON-LD responses include the context https://github.com/distributed-text-services/specifications/blob/cd287d0b1d18ef98904b42c5fd8c2eba1208c9ce/context/1-alpha1.json. The example of the DTS Entrypoint included in the current "unstable" version includes the property names dtsVersion, collection, navigation and document.
I tried to look them up in the JSON-LD context file, but none of them are defined there: https://distributed-text-services.github.io/specifications/context/1-alpha1.json and also not included in https://github.com/distributed-text-services/specifications/blob/master/context/1.0.0draft-2.json
I am no expert to JSON-LD, but I understand that it is not necessary to include all all properties used in the data to be defined in the @context it, but I was wondering, why properties like download or the now deprecated passage are (still) included, but some of the very custom properties to DTS are not.
In the current "unstable" specification the JSON-LD responses include the context https://github.com/distributed-text-services/specifications/blob/cd287d0b1d18ef98904b42c5fd8c2eba1208c9ce/context/1-alpha1.json. The example of the DTS Entrypoint included in the current "unstable" version includes the property names
dtsVersion,collection,navigationanddocument.I tried to look them up in the JSON-LD context file, but none of them are defined there: https://distributed-text-services.github.io/specifications/context/1-alpha1.json and also not included in https://github.com/distributed-text-services/specifications/blob/master/context/1.0.0draft-2.json
I am no expert to JSON-LD, but I understand that it is not necessary to include all all properties used in the data to be defined in the @context it, but I was wondering, why properties like
downloador the now deprecatedpassageare (still) included, but some of the very custom properties to DTS are not.