Viewing Hint that object has canvases that represent pages that can be turned
hasSequences
2015-12-13 23:00:00Z
hasRanges
Zone
Used to group annotations together in an area of a Canvas, for example to model columns, foldouts or palimpsests; Note that Zones are not currently used in the IIIF Presentation API.
hasAnnotations
hasImageAnnotations
hasCollections
Viewing Hint that the Canvas MUST NOT be presented in a page turner
A string containing an attribution description that must be displayed when using the resource
attributionLabel
hasLists
hasManifests
Collections with this hint consist of multiple manifests that each form part of a logical whole.
Canvases with this hint depict both parts of an opening.
hasCanvases
hasContentLayer
A link from a Range to a Layer that provides the content resources of that Range
viewingHint
A hint to a user agent as to how to render the resource
Left-to-Right Viewing Direction
AnnotationList
AnnotationLists are an ordered list of Annotation objects. Typically all Annnotations in a list target the same Canvas
An rdf:List of label/value pairs providing descriptive metadata about the resource, intended for human audience
metadataLabels
hasStartCanvas
A link from a Manifest or Sequence to the Canvas that the rendering agent should initialize their view with.
References the sc:ViewingDirection that defines the direction that the resource should be viewed in
viewingDirection
Bottom-to-Top Viewing Direction
Top-to-Bottom Viewing Direction
Sequence
The sequence conveys the ordering of the views of the object.
Each canvas represents a separate individual object, and should not have transitions
Right-to-Left Viewing Direction
The topmost range in a nested hierarchy, such as a table of contents
Each canvas represents a segment of a continuous object such as a long scroll
ViewingHint
The canvas represents an individual page or view and acts as a central point for laying out the different content resources that make up the display.
Canvas
Layers are lists of AnnotationLists to group them together, for example to create the set of lists that make up a particular translation/edition of a text
Layer
List
Manifest
The manifest resource represents a single object and any intellectual work or works embodied within that object
Ranges describe additional structure within an object, such as newspaper articles that span pages, the range of non-content-bearing pages at the beginning of a work, or chapters within a book
Range
Collection
Collections are used to list the manifests available for viewing, and to describe the structures, hierarchies or collections that the physical objects are part of.
ViewingDirection