Timothy Lebo vsr http://purl.org/twc/vocab/vsr# Visual Strategies in RDF 2013-02-27 http://prefix.cc/vsr https://github.com/timrdf/vsr An abstractly linear Graphic. A Graphic whose visual force properties are opposite of the direction present in the content representation. The blue component of an RGB triplet. A visual perceptual property derived from the spectrum of light. A Graphic may be attributed to have multiple distinct Colors, depending on the observer and the different visual components of a Graphic. For example, a shape with a green stroke, blue font, and a gray fill can be said to be green, blue, and gray. Any and all are correct. Similarly, a Graphic may be stated to have a *color*, without the specifics about what aspects exhibit that color. This can be useful during the development of a visual strategy, where it is decided that a Graphic should be a particular color without specifying *what* about the Graphic exhibits that color. Relations from a Graphic to its content. The (content) resource shown or represented by a Graphic (i.e., drawing, painting, or other visual form). depicts A visual property encoded in a non-planar Bertin elevation. Elevation variables can be sub-organized into more- and less-prominent from a visual observer's perspective. The background region of the graphic, i.e. within the boundary of the graphic. The source Graphic of a binary relation that is encoded in the Bertin semiotic plane. A content-oriented identifier of a visual binary relation's source Graphic. There exists a mapping from from_domain to the planar variable 'from', which exists in the graphical identity space. The green component of an RGB triplet. A visual property that is encoded in Bertin's semiotic plane, as opposed to the elevation visual variables. A visual relation that is encoded in the visual (Bertin) plane. Could be a transitive of directPlanarRelation. The red component of an RGB triplet. A related Graphic at the visual level (not necessarilty the content level). TODO: Use SIO? The red, green, and blue components of an RGB triplet delimited by some string. Can contains just one value, in which case all RGB will assume it. The boundary edge of the graphic. The target Graphic of a binary relation that is encoded in the Bertin semiotic plane. A content-oriented identifier of a visual binary relation's target Graphic. There exists a mapping from to_domain to the planar variable 'to', which exists in the graphical identity space. The contents that should be rendered when the subject graphic is in focus by the cursor. The traditional way to render a tooltip is to show it hovering above the tooltipped-resource. If the tooltip is just a string literal, use a resource with prov:value. If the tooltip should be constructed according to a plan/recipe, then the contents resource should be described as such. The thickness of the stroke at the boundary edge of a graphic. The value is a resource that in turn can be described in a variety of ways, depending on the implementation (e.g. absolute vs. relative thicknesses; screen constant vs. relative to the region area; etc.). The horizontal position of a Graphic. The vertical position of a Graphic. A visual presentation on some surface, such as a wall, canvas, screen, paper, or stone to brand, inform, illustrate, or entertain. A computer file or data element within a computer file that provides instruction for creating a visual presentation isre also considered graphic. Graphic A visual perceptual property derived from the spectrum of light. A Graphic may be attributed to have multiple distinct Colors, depending on the observer and the different visual components of a Graphic. For example, a shape with a green stroke, blue font, and a gray fill can be said to be green, blue, and gray. Any and all are correct. Similarly, a Graphic may be stated to have a *color*, without the specifics about what aspects exhibit that color. This can be useful during the development of a visual strategy, where it is decided that a Graphic should be a particular color without specifying *what* about the Graphic exhibits that color. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color