Yes I meant it to be relational data.
Maybe a simple version. One table per index kind.
And on Wiki pages data-records like:
Person = {Wiki:
en.wikipedia.org/Anne_Frank, Name: Anne Frank, Born: 1929,
Died: 1944, ....}
Writer = {Wiki:
en.wikipedia.org/Anne_Frank, Name: Anne Frank, Language:
German, Duthch}
WWII_Victims = {Wiki:
en.wikipedia.org/Anne_Frank}
The parser would add the data to the apropriate tables.
Gerard, what do you mean by, "it will happen"?
-----Original Message-----
From: Gerard Meijssen [mailto:gerard.meijssen@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 15, 2005 7:29 AM
To: wikipedia-l(a)Wikimedia.org
Cc: k.andris(a)gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Wikipedia-l] Re:WikiIndex (idea)
Hoi
Sounds like relational data to me and, Wikidata is going to happen :)
Thanks,
GerardM
Matt Kingston wrote:
Sounds to me like it would be a sort of
"expert" system. Consider:
The Wikipedia article Anne Frank could have tags at the bottom like
{WasBorn:1929}
(IsA:Woman}
{Wrote:The_Diary_Of_A_Young_Girl}
{BornIn:Germany}
you get the idea. These facts or relationships tie together different
articles in a more structured way. Presumably a user interface system could
then be
written that would take all the data and be able to do things like
list off all the female german authors of the twentieth century.
Since facts aren't tied to one language, the "relationship database"
could span all languages (since there is already a system for linking
articles on
the same subject to different languages). A relationship would
have a certain ID internally with "translations" to different languages. So
after typing in: {BornIn:Germany} in the english version, the computer would
find the french equivelent of the relationship -BornIn- and the french equiv
of Germany and update the french Anne_Frank article accordingly.
Anyway, I'm no specialist in the area, I do know that there are some
internet projects of this sort trying to teach computers "common sense"
{Lion IsA Animal} I don't know how much success they've had. It might be
usefull, but I'm not so sure it fits into wikipedias mandate.
Just my three cents.
Matt