There were various people asking about the right tools for Schema.org implementation. I thought of writing this article where I will be mentioning about various tools used for implementing schema.org markups. I would divide this article into four sections so that one could specifically look into the things they want to. So lets start with it.
Tools Available
Programming Language:-
1. JavaScript
- MicrodataJS(Plugin for JavaScript for providing Microdata on your website).
- Live Microdata(Tool that allows you to test your markup on your brower).
- RDF::Microdata gem(To parse microdata into RDF using RDF.rd platform).
- RDF Distiller(Online Facility for the above).
- rdflib plugin(Enables to parse Microdata and process the resulting RDF).
- omnidator (The omnipotent data translator, an online tool with a CORS-enabled API to translate formats that use Schema.org terms).
- any23 (which also powers the data acquisition module of the semantic indexer Sindice) has released support for microdata; see, for example, the search results for Schema.org terms.
Publishing:-
1. Form-based online tools
- Form-based tools that allow you to generate HTML snippets, decorated with Schema.org terms in microdata
- web.instata (It takes a CSV file as input and generates a HTML document with the data items marked up with Schema.org terms).
- Upcoming release of TopBraid Composer will include support for editing and processing Schema.org Microdata.
Platforms:-
- Drupal: Drupal module for mapping Drupal content structure to schema.org vocabularies.
- Joomla: extension to the Joomla! CMS that allows to add Schema.org terms to articles; a screen cast about the extension in action is available as well.
- WordPress: Schema for WordPress is a plug-in that stores the HTML markup and makes it available using shortcodes when a post or page is created in WordPress.
- Virtuoso: OpenLink’s Virtuoso Sponger (an integral part of Virtuoso’s hybrid database engine, which caters for relational tables as well as relational property graphs) supports Microdata natively and turns it into Linked Data. Further, OpenLink’s URIBurner (a data virtualization service that transforms data hosted in a variety of data spaces and formats into standards compliant Linked Data Objects for uniform access, integration and management) supports microdata amongst many other input formats.
- WordPress-Plugin : WordLift is a WordPress Plug-In developed by InSideOut10 to enrich user-created text (a blog post, article or web page) with HTML Microdata and to improve content findability.
The above mentioned tools are really useful and freely available. Please check them out.(TopBraid also has a paid version.)
[ This post was taken from here ]
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Just came across this service …
http://www.schemafeed.com – There is also a json feed here as well.
WordPress Plugin – http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/schemafeed/
Kind of like twitter but for schema.org?!
Thanks. I would definitely update it.
Hi there,
I just wanted to add to the list WordLift http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wordlift/ another plug-in for WordPress that will do entity recognition (using a semantic stack known as IKS http://www.iks-project.eu) and automatic mark-up of people, places and organizations using Schema.org (compatible with Google Rich Snippets).
I would definitely add this up into my post thanks for pointing this out.
Too great. I have downloaded WordLift for WP. Thanks guys so much
Pleasure. I would soon share some more things this year!!!
I just wanted to let you know that while we work on the second release of WordLift that will enable WordPress user to add new navigation patterns based on content entities the plugin recognizes on blog posts we opened the WordLift website – http://wordlift.insideout.io
I would Definitely blog about the Wordlift website and its functionality. Thanks for information.Hope you would propagate it.