Internet Engineering Task Force                          L.R. van Kammen
Internet-Draft                                           12 October 2023
Intended status: Informational                                          



                              XR Fragments
                   draft-XRFRAGMENTS-leonvankammen-00

Abstract

   This draft is a specification for 4D URLs & hypermediatic
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hypermediatic) navigation, which
   links together space, time & text together, for hypermedia browsers
   with- or without a network-connection.
   The specification promotes spatial addressibility, sharing,
   navigation, query-ing and annotating interactive (text)objects across
   for (XR) Browsers.
   XR Fragments allows us to enrich existing dataformats, by recursive
   use of existing proven technologies like URI Fragments
   (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/URI_fragment) and BibTags notation.

   Almost every idea in this document is demonstrated at
   https://xrfragment.org (https://xrfragment.org)

Status of This Memo

   This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
   provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
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   This Internet-Draft will expire on 14 April 2024.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2023 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.





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   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/
   license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document.
   Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
   and restrictions with respect to this document.  Code Components
   extracted from this document must include Revised BSD License text as
   described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are
   provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.

Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2
   2.  Core principle  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
   3.  Conventions and Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
     3.1.  XR Fragment URI Grammar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   4.  List of URI Fragments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
   5.  List of metadata for 3D nodes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
   6.  Spatial Referencing 3D  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   7.  Navigating 3D . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
   8.  Top-level URL processing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
   9.  Embedding XR content (src-instancing) . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
   10. Navigating content (internal/outbound href portals) . . . . .  12
     10.1.  UX spec  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     10.2.  Scaling instanced content  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
   11. XR Fragment queries . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
     11.1.  including/excluding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
     11.2.  Query Parser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
   12. Visible links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
   13. Text in XR (tagging,linking to spatial objects) . . . . . . .  16
     13.1.  Default Data URI mimetype  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
     13.2.  URL and Data URI . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
     13.3.  XR Text example parser . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
   14. Transclusion (broken link) resolution . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
   15. Topic-based index-less Webrings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
   16. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
   17. FAQ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
   18. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  27
   19. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  27
   20. Appendix: Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  27

1.  Introduction

   How can we add more features to existing text & 3D scenes, without
   introducing new dataformats?
   Historically, there's many attempts to create the ultimate
   markuplanguage or 3D fileformat.
   The lowest common denominator is: describing/tagging/naming nodes
   using *plain text*.



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   XR Fragments allows us to enrich/connect existing dataformats, by
   introducing existing technologies/ideas:

   1.  addressibility and hypermediatic
       (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hypermediatic) navigation of
       3D scenes/objects: URI Fragments (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
       URI_fragment) + src/href spatial metadata
   2.  Interlinking text/& 3D by collapsing space into a Word Graph
       (XRWG) to show visible links (#visible-links) (and augmenting
       text with bibs (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/tagbibs) /
       BibTags (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BibTeX) appendices (see
       visual-meta (https://visual-meta.info) e.g.)
   3.  unlocking spatial potential of the (originally 2D) hashtag (which
       jumps to a chapter) for navigating XR documents

   |  NOTE: The chapters in this document are ordered from highlevel to
   |  lowlevel (technical) as much as possible

2.  Core principle

   XR Fragments strives to serve (nontechnical/fuzzy) humans first, and
   machine(implementations) later, by ensuring hasslefree text-vs-
   thought feedback loops.
   This also means that the repair-ability of machine-matters should be
   human friendly too (not too complex).
   XR Fragments tries to seek to connect the world of text (semantical
   web / RDF), and the world of pixels.
   Instead of combining them (in a game-editor e.g.), XR Fragments is
   opting for a more integrated path *towards* them, by describing how
   to make browsers *4D URL-ready*:





















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     +===========+=============================+====================+
     | principle | XR 4D URL                   | HTML 2D URL        |
     +===========+=============================+====================+
     | the XRWG  | wordgraph (collapses 3D     | Ctrl-F (find)      |
     |           | scene to tags)              |                    |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+
     | the       | hashtags map to camera/     | hashtags map to    |
     | hashbus   | scene-projections           | document positions |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+
     | spacetime | positions camera, triggers  | jumps/scrolls to   |
     | hashtags  | scene-preset/time           | chapter            |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+
     | src       | renders content and offers  | renders content    |
     | metadata  | sourceportation             |                    |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+
     | href      | teleports to other XR       | jumps to other     |
     | metadata  | document                    | HTML document      |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+
     | href      | repositions camera or       | jumps to camera    |
     | metadata  | animation-range             |                    |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+
     | href      | draws visible connection(s) |                    |
     | metadata  | for XRWG 'tag'              |                    |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+
     | href      | triggers predefined view    | Media fragments    |
     | metadata  |                             |                    |
     +-----------+-----------------------------+--------------------+

                                 Table 1

   |  XR Fragments does not look at XR (or the web) thru the lens of
   |  HTML.
   |  But approaches things from a higherlevel feedbackloop/hypermedia
   |  browser-perspective:

















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 +──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+
 │                                                                                              │
 │   the soul of any URL:       ://macro        /meso            ?micro      #nano              │
 │                                                                                              │
 │                2D URL:       ://library.com  /document        ?search     #chapter           │
 │                                                                                              │
 │                4D URL:       ://park.com     /4Dscene.fbx ──> ?misc  ──>  #view ───> hashbus │
 │                                                │                          #query      │      │
 │                                                │                          #tag        │      │
 │                                                │                                      │      │
 │                                               XRWG <─────────────────────<────────────+      │
 │                                                │                                      │      │
 │                                                ├─ objects ───────────────>────────────│      │
 │                                                └─ text    ───────────────>────────────+      │
 │                                                                                              │
 │                                                                                              │
 +──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+

   Traditional webbrowsers can become 4D document-ready by:

   *  hypermediatic (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hypermediatic)
      loading 3D assets (gltf/fbx e.g.) natively (with or without using
      HTML).
   *  allowing assets to publish hashtags to themselves (the scene)
      using the hashbus (like hashtags controlling the scrollbar).
   *  collapsing the 3D scene to an wordgraph (for essential navigation
      purposes) controllable thru a hash(tag)bus

   XR Fragments itself are hypermediatic
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hypermediatic) and HTML-
   agnostic, though pseudo-XR Fragment browsers *can* be implemented on
   top of HTML/Javascript.

3.  Conventions and Definitions

   See appendix below in case certain terms are not clear.

3.1.  XR Fragment URI Grammar

   reserved    = gen-delims / sub-delims
   gen-delims  = "#" / "&"
   sub-delims  = "," / "="

   |  Example: ://foo.com/my3d.gltf#pos=1,0,0&prio=-5&t=0,100







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     +=============================+=================================+
     | Demo                        | Explanation                     |
     +=============================+=================================+
     | pos=1,2,3                   | vector/coordinate argument e.g. |
     +-----------------------------+---------------------------------+
     | pos=1,2,3&rot=0,90,0&q=.foo | combinators                     |
     +-----------------------------+---------------------------------+

                                  Table 2

   |  this is already implemented in all browsers

4.  List of URI Fragments

   +==========+=========+===============+==============================+
   | fragment | type    | example       | info                         |
   +==========+=========+===============+==============================+
   | #pos     | vector3 | #pos=0.5,0,0  | positions camera (or XR      |
   |          |         |               | floor) to xyz-coord          |
   |          |         |               | 0.5,0,0,                     |
   +----------+---------+---------------+------------------------------+
   | #rot     | vector3 | #rot=0,90,0   | rotates camera to xyz-       |
   |          |         |               | coord 0.5,0,0                |
   +----------+---------+---------------+------------------------------+
   | #t       | vector3 | #t=1,500,1000 | play animation-loop range    |
   |          |         |               | between frame 500 and        |
   |          |         |               | 1000, at normal speed        |
   +----------+---------+---------------+------------------------------+
   | #......  | string  | #.cubes #cube | predefined views, XRWG       |
   |          |         |               | fragments and ID             |
   |          |         |               | fragments                    |
   +----------+---------+---------------+------------------------------+

                                  Table 3

   |  xyz coordinates are similar to ones found in SVG Media Fragments

5.  List of metadata for 3D nodes

    +======+========+==========+==================+===================+
    | key  | type   | example  | function         | existing          |
    |      |        | (JSON)   |                  | compatibility     |
    +======+========+==========+==================+===================+
    | href | string | "href":  | XR teleport      | custom property   |
    |      |        | "b.gltf" |                  | in 3D fileformats |
    +------+--------+----------+------------------+-------------------+
    | src  | string | "src":   | XR embed /       | custom property   |
    |      |        | "#cube"  | teleport         | in 3D fileformats |



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    +------+--------+----------+------------------+-------------------+
    | tag  | string | "tag":   | tag object (for  | custom property   |
    |      |        | "cubes   | query-use / XRWG | in 3D fileformats |
    |      |        | geo"     | highlighting)    |                   |
    +------+--------+----------+------------------+-------------------+

                                  Table 4

   Supported popular compatible 3D fileformats: .gltf, .obj, .fbx,
   .usdz, .json (THREE.js), .dae and so on.

   |  NOTE: XR Fragments are optional but also file- and protocol-
   |  agnostic, which means that programmatic 3D scene(nodes) can also
   |  use the mechanism/metadata.

6.  Spatial Referencing 3D

   XR Fragments assume the following objectname-to-URIFragment mapping:

  my.io/scene.fbx
  +─────────────────────────────+
  │ sky                         │  src: http://my.io/scene.fbx#sky          (includes building,mainobject,floor)
  │ +─────────────────────────+ │
  │ │ building                │ │  src: http://my.io/scene.fbx#building     (includes mainobject,floor)
  │ │ +─────────────────────+ │ │
  │ │ │ mainobject          │ │ │  src: http://my.io/scene.fbx#mainobject   (includes floor)
  │ │ │ +─────────────────+ │ │ │
  │ │ │ │ floor           │ │ │ │  src: http://my.io/scene.fbx#floor        (just floor object)
  │ │ │ │                 │ │ │ │
  │ │ │ +─────────────────+ │ │ │
  │ │ +─────────────────────+ │ │
  │ +─────────────────────────+ │
  +─────────────────────────────+

   |  Every 3D fileformat supports named 3D object, and this name allows
   |  URLs (fragments) to reference them (and their children objects).

   Clever nested design of 3D scenes allow great ways for re-using
   content, and/or previewing scenes.
   For example, to render a portal with a preview-version of the scene,
   create an 3D object with:

   *  href: https://scene.fbx
   *  src: https://otherworld.gltf#mainobject







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   |  It also allows *sourceportation*, which basically means the
   |  enduser can teleport to the original XR Document of an src
   |  embedded object, and see a visible connection to the particular
   |  embedded object.  Basically an embedded link becoming an outbound
   |  link by activating it.

7.  Navigating 3D

    +====================+=========+==================================+
    | fragment           | type    | functionality                    |
    +====================+=========+==================================+
    | <b>#pos</b>=0,0,0  | vector3 | (re)position camera              |
    +--------------------+---------+----------------------------------+
    | <b>#t</b>=0,100    | vector3 | set playback speed, and          |
    |                    |         | (re)position looprange of scene- |
    |                    |         | animation or src-mediacontent    |
    +--------------------+---------+----------------------------------+
    | <b>#rot</b>=0,90,0 | vector3 | rotate camera                    |
    +--------------------+---------+----------------------------------+

                                  Table 5

   &#187; example implementation
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/3rd/js/
   three/xrf/pos.js)
   &#187; discussion (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/
   issues/5)

   1.  the Y-coordinate of pos identifies the floorposition.  This means
       that desktop-projections usually need to add 1.5m (average person
       height) on top (which is done automatically by VR/AR headsets).
   2.  set the position of the camera accordingly to the vector3 values
       of #pos
   3.  rot sets the rotation of the camera (only for non-VR/AR headsets)
   4.  t sets the playbackspeed and animation-range of the current scene
       animation(s) or src-mediacontent (video/audioframes e.g., use
       t=0,7,7 to 'STOP' at frame 7 e.g.)
   5.  in case an href does not mention any pos-coordinate, pos=0,0,0
       will be assumed

   Here's an ascii representation of a 3D scene-graph which contains 3D
   objects &#9723; and their metadata:









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  +────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+
  │                                                        │
  │  index.gltf                                            │
  │    │                                                   │
  │    ├── ◻ buttonA                                       │
  │    │      └ href: #pos=1,0,1&t=100,200                 │
  │    │                                                   │
  │    └── ◻ buttonB                                       │
  │           └ href: other.fbx                            │   <── file─agnostic (can be .gltf .obj etc)
  │                                                        │
  +────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+

   An XR Fragment-compatible browser viewing this scene, allows the end-
   user to interact with the buttonA and buttonB.
   In case of buttonA the end-user will be teleported to another
   location and time in the *current loaded scene*, but buttonB will
   *replace the current scene* with a new one, like other.fbx, and
   assume pos=0,0,0.

8.  Top-level URL processing

   |  Example URL: ://foo/world.gltf#cube&pos=0,0,0

   The URL-processing-flow for hypermedia browsers goes like this:

   1.  IF a #cube matches a custom property-key (of an object) in the 3D
       file/scene (#cube: #......) <b>THEN</b> execute that
       predefined_view.
   2.  IF scene operators (pos) and/or animation operator (t) are
       present in the URL then (re)position the camera and/or animation-
       range accordingly.
   3.  IF no camera-position has been set in <b>step 1 or 2</b> update
       the top-level URL with #pos=0,0,0 (example (https://github.com/co
       derofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/3rd/js/three/
       navigator.js#L31]]))
   4.  IF a #cube matches the name (of an object) in the 3D file/scene
       then draw a line from the enduser('s heart) to that object (to
       highlight it).
   5.  IF a #cube matches anything else in the XR Word Graph (XRWG) draw
       wires to them (text or related objects).

9.  Embedding XR content (src-instancing)

   src is the 3D version of the <a target="_blank"
   href="https://www.w3.org/html/wiki/Elements/iframe">iframe</a>.
   It instances content (in objects) in the current scene/asset.





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   +========+==========+==============================================+
   |fragment| type     | example value                                |
   +========+==========+==============================================+
   |src     | string   | #cube                                        |
   |        | (uri,    | #sometag                                     |
   |        | hashtag/ | #q=-ball_inside_cube<br>#q=-/sky             |
   |        | query)   | -rain<br>#q=-.language                       |
   |        |          | .english<br>#q=price:>2                      |
   |        |          | price:<5`<br>https://linux.org/penguin.png   |
   |        |          | https://linux.world/distrowatch.gltf#t=1,100 |
   |        |          | linuxapp://conference/nixworkshop/           |
   |        |          | apply.gltf#q=flyer                           |
   |        |          | androidapp://page1?tutorial#pos=0,0,1&t1,100 |
   +--------+----------+----------------------------------------------+

                                 Table 6

   Here's an ascii representation of a 3D scene-graph with 3D objects
   &#9723; which embeds remote & local 3D objects &#9723; with/out using
   queries:

  +────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+  +─────────────────────────+
  │                                                        │  │                         │
  │  index.gltf                                            │  │ ocean.com/aquarium.fbx  │
  │    │                                                   │  │   │                     │
  │    ├── ◻ canvas                                        │  │   └── ◻ fishbowl        │
  │    │      └ src: painting.png                          │  │         ├─ ◻ bass       │
  │    │                                                   │  │         └─ ◻ tuna       │
  │    ├── ◻ aquariumcube                                  │  │                         │
  │    │      └ src: ://rescue.com/fish.gltf#bass%20tuna   │  +─────────────────────────+
  │    │                                                   │
  │    ├── ◻ bedroom                                       │
  │    │      └ src: #canvas                               │
  │    │                                                   │
  │    └── ◻ livingroom                                    │
  │           └ src: #canvas                               │
  │                                                        │
  +────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+

   An XR Fragment-compatible browser viewing this scene, lazy-loads and
   projects painting.png onto the (plane) object called canvas (which is
   copy-instanced in the bed and livingroom).
   Also, after lazy-loading ocean.com/aquarium.gltf, only the queried
   objects bass and tuna will be instanced inside aquariumcube.
   Resizing will be happen accordingly to its placeholder object
   aquariumcube, see chapter Scaling.





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   |  Instead of cherrypicking objects with #bass&tuna thru src, queries
   |  can be used to import the whole scene (and filter out certain
   |  objects).  See next chapter below.

   *Specification*:

   1.   local/remote content is instanced by the src (query) value (and
        attaches it to the placeholder mesh containing the src property)
   2.   <b>local</b> src values (URL *starting* with #, like #cube&foo)
        means *only* the mentioned objectnames will be copied to the
        instanced scene (from the current scene) while preserving their
        names (to support recursive selectors). (example code) (https://
        github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/3rd/js/
        three/xrf/src.js)
   3.   <b>local</b> src values indicating a query (#q=), means that all
        included objects (from the current scene) will be copied to the
        instanced scene (before applying the query) while preserving
        their names (to support recursive selectors). (example code) (ht
        tps://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/3rd/j
        s/three/xrf/src.js)
   4.   the instanced scene (from a src value) should be <b>scaled
        accordingly</b> to its placeholder object or <b>scaled
        relatively</b> based on the scale-property (of a geometry-less
        placeholder, an 'empty'-object in blender e.g.).  For more info
        see Chapter Scaling.
   5.   <b>external</b> src values should be served with appropriate
        mimetype (so the XR Fragment-compatible browser will now how to
        render it).  The bare minimum supported mimetypes are:
   6.   src values should make its placeholder object invisible, and
        only flush its children when the resolved content can
        succesfully be retrieved (see broken links (#links))
   7.   <b>external</b> src values should respect the fallback link
        mechanism (see broken links (#broken-links)
   8.   when the placeholder object is a 2D plane, but the mimetype is
        3D, then render the spatial content on that plane via a stencil
        buffer.
   9.   src-values are non-recursive: when linking to an external object
        (src: foo.fbx#bar), then src-metadata on object bar should be
        ignored.
   10.  clicking on external src-values always allow sourceportation:
        teleporting to the origin URI to which the object belongs.
   11.  when only one object was cherrypicked (#cube e.g.), set its
        position to 0,0,0

   *  model/gltf+json
   *  image/png
   *  image/jpg
   *  text/plain;charset=utf-8;bib=^@



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   &#187; example implementation
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/3rd/js/
   three/xrf/src.js)
   &#187; example 3D asset
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/example/
   assets/src.gltf#L192)
   &#187; discussion (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/
   issues/4)

10.  Navigating content (internal/outbound href portals)

   navigation, portals & mutations

       +==========+==================+============================+
       | fragment | type             | example value              |
       +==========+==================+============================+
       | href     | string (uri or   | #pos=1,1,0                 |
       |          | predefined view) | #pos=1,1,0&rot=90,0,0      |
       |          |                  | ://somefile.gltf#pos=1,1,0 |
       +----------+------------------+----------------------------+

                                 Table 7

   1.  clicking an outbound ''external''- or ''file URI'' fully replaces
       the current scene and assumes pos=0,0,0&rot=0,0,0 by default
       (unless specified)

   2.  relocation/reorientation should happen locally for local URI's
       (#pos=....)

   3.  navigation should not happen ''immediately'' when user is more
       than 2 meter away from the portal/object containing the href (to
       prevent accidental navigation e.g.)

   4.  URL navigation should always be reflected in the client (in case
       of javascript: see [here
       (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/dev/src/3rd/
       js/three/navigator.js) for an example navigator).

   5.  In XR mode, the navigator back/forward-buttons should be always
       visible (using a wearable e.g., see [here
       (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/dev/example/
       aframe/sandbox/index.html#L26-L29) for an example wearable)








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   6.  in case of navigating to a new [[pos)ition, ''first'' navigate to
       the ''current position'' so that the ''back-button'' of the
       ''browser-history'' always refers to the previous position (see
       [here (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/s
       rc/3rd/js/three/xrf/href.js#L97))

   7.  portal-rendering: a 2:1 ratio texture-material indicates an
       equirectangular projection

   &#187; example implementation
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/3rd/js/
   three/xrf/href.js)
   &#187; example 3D asset
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/example/
   assets/href.gltf#L192)
   &#187; discussion (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/
   issues/1)

10.1.  UX spec

   End-users should always have read/write access to:

   1.  the current (toplevel) <b>URL</b> (an URLbar etc)
   2.  URL-history (a <b>back/forward</b> button e.g.)
   3.  Clicking/Touching an href navigates (and updates the URL) to
       another scene/file (and coordinate e.g. in case the URL contains
       XR Fragments).

10.2.  Scaling instanced content

   Sometimes embedded properties (like src) instance new objects.
   But what about their scale?
   How does the scale of the object (with the embedded properties)
   impact the scale of the referenced content?

   |  Rule of thumb: visible placeholder objects act as a '3D canvas'
   |  for the referenced scene (a plane acts like a 2D canvas for images
   |  e, a cube as a 3D canvas e.g.).

   1.  <b>IF</b> an embedded property (src e.g.) is set on an non-empty
       placeholder object (geometry of >2 vertices):

   *  calculate the <b>bounding box</b> of the ''placeholder'' object
      (maxsize=1.4 e.g.)
   *  hide the ''placeholder'' object (material e.g.)
   *  instance the src scene as a child of the existing object
   *  calculate the <b>bounding box</b> of the instanced scene, and
      scale it accordingly (to 1.4 e.g.)



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   |  REASON: non-empty placeholder object can act as a protective
   |  bounding-box (for remote content of which might grow over time
   |  e.g.)

   2.  ELSE multiply the scale-vector of the instanced scene with the
       scale-vector (a common property of a 3D node) of the
       <b>placeholder</b> object.

   |  TODO: needs intermediate visuals to make things more obvious

11.  XR Fragment queries

   Include, exclude, hide/shows objects using space-separated strings:

      +==================+==========================================+
      | example          | outcome                                  |
      +==================+==========================================+
      | #q=-sky          | show everything except object named sky  |
      +------------------+------------------------------------------+
      | #q=-tag:language | hide everything with tag language, but   |
      | tag:english      | show all tag english objects             |
      +------------------+------------------------------------------+
      | #q=price:>2      | of all objects with property price, show |
      | price:<5         | only objects with value between 2 and 5  |
      +------------------+------------------------------------------+

                                  Table 8

   It's simple but powerful syntax which allows filtering the scene
   using searchengine prompt-style feeling:

   1.  queries are a way to traverse a scene, and filter objects based
       on their tag- or property-values.
   2.  words like german match tag-metadata of 3D objects like
       "tag":"german"
   3.  words like german match (XR Text) objects with (Bib(s)TeX) tags
       like #KarlHeinz@german or @german{KarlHeinz, ... e.g.

   *  see an (outdated) example video here
      (https://coderofsalvation.github.io/xrfragment.media/queries.mp4)











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11.1.  including/excluding

      +==========+=================================================+
      | operator | info                                            |
      +==========+=================================================+
      | -        | removes/hides object(s)                         |
      +----------+-------------------------------------------------+
      | :        | indicates an object-embedded custom property    |
      |          | key/value                                       |
      +----------+-------------------------------------------------+
      | > <      | compare float or int number                     |
      +----------+-------------------------------------------------+
      | /        | reference to root-scene.                        |
      |          | Useful in case of (preventing) showing/hiding   |
      |          | objects in nested scenes (instanced by src) (*) |
      +----------+-------------------------------------------------+

                                 Table 9

   |  * = #q=-/cube hides object cube only in the root-scene (not nested
   |  cube objects)
   |  #q=-cube hides both object cube in the root-scene <b>AND</b>
   |  nested skybox objects |

   &#187; example implementation
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/3rd/js/
   three/xrf/q.js) &#187; example 3D asset
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/example/
   assets/query.gltf#L192) &#187; discussion
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/issues/3)

11.2.  Query Parser

   Here's how to write a query parser:

   1.   create an associative array/object to store query-arguments as
        objects
   2.   detect object id's & properties foo:1 and foo (reference regex:
        /^.*:[><=!]?/ )
   3.   detect excluders like -foo,-foo:1,-.foo,-/foo (reference regex:
        /^-/ )
   4.   detect root selectors like /foo (reference regex: /^[-]?\// )
   5.   detect number values like foo:1 (reference regex: /^[0-9\.]+$/ )
   6.   for every query token split string on :
   7.   create an empty array rules
   8.   then strip key-operator: convert "-foo" into "foo"
   9.   add operator and value to rule-array
   10.  therefore we we set id to true or false (false=excluder -)



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   11.  and we set root to true or false (true=/ root selector is
        present)
   12.  we convert key '/foo' into 'foo'
   13.  finally we add the key/value to the store like store.foo =
        {id:false,root:true} e.g.

   |  An example query-parser (which compiles to many languages) can be
   |  found here
   |  (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/main/src/
   |  xrfragment/Query.hx)

12.  Visible links

   When predefined views, XRWG fragments and ID fragments (#cube or
   #mytag e.g.) are triggered by the enduser (via toplevel URL or
   clicking href):

   1.  draw a wire from the enduser (preferabbly a bit below the camera,
       heartposition) to object(s) matching that ID (objectname)
   2.  draw a wire from the enduser (preferabbly a bit below the camera,
       heartposition) to object(s) matching that tag value
   3.  draw a wire from the enduser (preferabbly a bit below the camera,
       heartposition) to object(s) containing that in their src or href
       value

   The obvious approach for this, is to consult the XRWG (example
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/feat/macros/
   src/3rd/js/XRWG.js)), which basically has all these things already
   collected/organized for you during scene-load.

   *UX*

   4.  do not update the wires when the enduser moves, leave them as is
   5.  offer a control near the back/forward button which allows the
       user to (turn off) control the correlation-intensity of the XRWG

13.  Text in XR (tagging,linking to spatial objects)

   How does XR Fragments interlink text with objects?

   |  The XR Fragments does this by collapsing space into a *Word Graph*
   |  (the *XRWG* example
   |  (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/feat/macros/
   |  src/3rd/js/XRWG.js)), augmented by Bib(s)Tex.

   Instead of just throwing together all kinds media types into one
   experience (games), what about their tagged/semantical relationships?
   Perhaps the following question is related: why is HTML adopted less



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   in games outside the browser?  Through the lens of constructive lazy
   game-developers, ideally metadata must come *with* text, but not
   *obfuscate* the text, or *spawning another request* to fetch it.
   XR Fragments does this by detecting Bib(s)Tex, without introducing a
   new language or fileformat

   |  Why Bib(s)Tex?  Because its seems to be the lowest common
   |  denominator for an human-curated XRWG (extendable by
   |  speech/scanner/writing/typing e.g, see further motivation here
   |  (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hashtagbibs#bibs--bibtex-
   |  combo-lowest-common-denominator-for-linking-data))

   Hence:

   1.   XR Fragments promotes (de)serializing a scene to the XRWG
        (example (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/xrfragment/blob/fe
        at/macros/src/3rd/js/XRWG.js))
   2.   XR Fragments primes the XRWG, by collecting words from the tag
        and name-property of 3D objects.
   3.   XR Fragments primes the XRWG, by collecting words from
        *optional* metadata *at the end of content* of text (see default
        mimetype & Data URI)
   4.   Bib's (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hashtagbibs) and
        BibTex are first tag citizens for priming the XRWG with words
        (from XR text)
   5.   Like Bibs, XR Fragments generalizes the BibTex author/title-
        semantics (author{title}) into *this* points to *that*
        (this{that})
   6.   The XRWG should be recalculated when textvalues (in src) change
   7.   HTML/RDF/JSON is still great, but is beyond the XRWG-scope (they
        fit better in the application-layer)
   8.   Applications don't have to be able to access the XRWG
        programmatically, as they can easily generate one themselves by
        traversing the scene-nodes.
   9.   The XR Fragment focuses on fast and easy-to-generate end-user
        controllable word graphs (instead of complex implementations
        that try to defeat word ambiguity)
   10.  Tags are the scope for now (supporting https://github.com/WICG/
        scroll-to-text-fragment (https://github.com/WICG/scroll-to-text-
        fragment) will be considered)

   Example:









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  http://y.io/z.fbx                                                           | Derived XRWG (expressed as BibTex)
  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------
                                                                              | @house{castle,
  +-[src: data:.....]----------------------+   +-[3D mesh]-+                  |   url = {https://y.io/z.fbx#castle}
  | Chapter one                            |   |    / \    |                  | }
  |                                        |   |   /   \   |                  | @baroque{castle,
  | John built houses in baroque style.    |   |  /     \  |                  |   url = {https://y.io/z.fbx#castle}
  |                                        |   |  |_____|  |                  | }
  | #john@baroque                          |   +-----│-----+                  | @baroque{john}
  |                                        |         │                        |
  |                                        |         ├─ name: castle          |
  |                                        |         └─ tag: house baroque    |
  +----------------------------------------+                                  |
                                               [3D mesh ]                     |
                                               |    O   ├─ name: john         |
                                               |   /|\  |                     |
                                               |   / \  |                     |
                                               +--------+                     |

   |  the #john@baroque-bib associates both text John and objectname
   |  john, with tag baroque

   Another example:

  http://y.io/z.fbx                                                           | Derived XRWG (expressed as BibTex)
  ----------------------------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------
                                                                              |
  +-[src: data:.....]----------------------+   +-[3D mesh]-+                  | @house{castle,
  | Chapter one                            |   |    / \    |                  |   url = {https://y.io/z.fbx#castle}
  |                                        |   |   /   \   |                  | }
  | John built houses in baroque style.    |   |  /     \  |                  | @baroque{castle,
  |                                        |   |  |_____|  |                  |   url = {https://y.io/z.fbx#castle}
  | #john@baroque                          |   +-----│-----+                  | }
  | @baroque{john}                         |         │                        | @baroque{john}
  |                                        |         ├─ name: castle          |
  |                                        |         └─ tag: house baroque    |
  +----------------------------------------+                                  | @house{baroque}
                                               [3D mesh ]                     | @todo{baroque}
  +-[remotestorage.io / localstorage]------+   |    O   + name: john          |
  | #baroque@todo@house                    |   |   /|\  |                     |
  | ...                                    |   |   / \  |                     |
  +----------------------------------------+   +--------+                     |

   |  both #john@baroque-bib and BibTex @baroque{john} result in the
   |  same XRWG, however on top of that 2 tages (house and todo) are now
   |  associated with text/objectname/tag 'baroque'.





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   As seen above, the XRWG can expand bibs
   (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hashtagbibs) (and the whole
   scene) to BibTeX.
   This allows hasslefree authoring and copy-paste of associations *for
   and by humans*, but also makes these URLs possible:

        +==================+======================================+
        | URL example      | Result                               |
        +==================+======================================+
        | https://my.com/  | draws lines between mesh john, 3D    |
        | foo.gltf#baroque | mesh castle, text John built(..)     |
        +------------------+--------------------------------------+
        | https://my.com/  | draws lines between mesh john, and   |
        | foo.gltf#john    | the text John built (..)             |
        +------------------+--------------------------------------+
        | https://my.com/  | draws lines between mesh castle, and |
        | foo.gltf#house   | other objects with tag house or todo |
        +------------------+--------------------------------------+

                                  Table 10

   |  hashtagbibs (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hashtagbibs)
   |  potentially allow the enduser to annotate text/objects by
   |  *speaking/typing/scanning associations*, which the XR Browser
   |  saves to remotestorage (or localStorage per toplevel URL).  As
   |  well as, referencing BibTags per URI later on: https://y.io/
   |  z.fbx#@baroque@todo e.g.

   The XRWG allows XR Browsers to show/hide relationships in realtime at
   various levels:

   *  wordmatch *inside* src text
   *  wordmatch *inside* href text
   *  wordmatch object-names
   *  wordmatch object-tagnames

   Spatial wires can be rendered between words/objects etc.
   Some pointers for good UX (but not necessary to be XR Fragment
   compatible):

   9.  The XR Browser needs to adjust tag-scope based on the endusers
       needs/focus (infinite tagging only makes sense when environment
       is scaled down significantly)
   10. The XR Browser should always allow the human to view/edit the
       metadata, by clicking 'toggle metadata' on the 'back'
       (contextmenu e.g.) of any XR text, anywhere anytime.
   11. respect multi-line BiBTeX metadata in text because of the core
       principle (#core-principle)



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   12. Default font (unless specified otherwise) is a modern monospace
       font, for maximized tabular expressiveness (see the core
       principle (#core-principle)).
   13. anti-pattern: hardcoupling an XR Browser with a mandatory
       *markup/scripting-language* which departs from onubtrusive plain
       text (HTML/VRML/Javascript) (see the core principle (#core-
       principle))
   14. anti-pattern: limiting human introspection, by abandoning plain
       text as first tag citizen.

   |  The simplicity of appending metadata (and leveling the metadata-
   |  playfield between humans and machines) is also demonstrated by
   |  visual-meta (https://visual-meta.info) in greater detail.

   Fictional chat:

<John> Hey what about this: https://my.com/station.gltf#pos=0,0,1&rot=90,2,0&t=500,1000
<Sarah> I'm checking it right now
<Sarah> I don't see everything..where's our text from yesterday?
<John> Ah wait, that's tagged with tag 'draft' (and hidden)..hold on, try this:
<John> https://my.com/station.gltf#.draft&pos=0,0,1&rot=90,2,0&t=500,1000
<Sarah> how about we link the draft to the upcoming YELLO-event?
<John> ok I'm adding #draft@YELLO
<Sarah> Yesterday I also came up with other usefull assocations between other texts in the scene:
#event#YELLO
#2025@YELLO
<John> thanks, added.
<Sarah> Btw. I stumbled upon this spatial book which references station.gltf in some chapters:
<Sarah> https://thecommunity.org/forum/foo/mytrainstory.txt
<John> interesting, I'm importing mytrainstory.txt into station.gltf
<John> ah yes, chapter three points to trainterminal_2A in the scene, cool

13.1.  Default Data URI mimetype

   The src-values work as expected (respecting mime-types), however:

   The XR Fragment specification bumps the traditional default browser-
   mimetype

   text/plain;charset=US-ASCII

   to a hashtagbib(tex)-friendly one:

   text/plain;charset=utf-8;bib=^@

   This indicates that:

   *  utf-8 is supported by default



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   *  lines beginning with @ will not be rendered verbatim by default
      (read more (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/
      hashtagbibs#hashtagbib-mimetypes))
   *  the XRWG should expand bibs to BibTex occurring in text
      (#contactjohn@todo@important e.g.)

   By doing so, the XR Browser (applications-layer) can interpret
   microformats (visual-meta (https://visual-meta.info) to connect text
   further with its environment ( setup links between textual/spatial
   objects automatically e.g.).

   |  for more info on this mimetype see bibs
   |  (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hashtagbibs)

   Advantages:

   *  auto-expanding of hashtagbibs
      (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hashtagbibs) associations
   *  out-of-the-box (de)multiplex human text and metadata in one go
      (see the core principle (#core-principle))
   *  no network-overhead for metadata (see the core principle (#core-
      principle))
   *  ensuring high FPS: HTML/RDF historically is too 'requesty'/'parsy'
      for game studios
   *  rich send/receive/copy-paste everywhere by default, metadata being
      retained (see the core principle (#core-principle))
   *  netto result: less webservices, therefore less servers, and
      overall better FPS in XR

   |  This significantly expands expressiveness and portability of human
   |  tagged text, by *postponing machine-concerns to the end of the
   |  human text* in contrast to literal interweaving of content and
   |  markupsymbols (or extra network requests, webservices e.g.).

   For all other purposes, regular mimetypes can be used (but are not
   required by the spec).

13.2.  URL and Data URI













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  +--------------------------------------------------------------+  +------------------------+
  |                                                              |  | author.com/article.txt |
  |  index.gltf                                                  |  +------------------------+
  |    │                                                         |  |                        |
  |    ├── ◻ article_canvas                                      |  | Hello friends.         |
  |    │    └ src: ://author.com/article.txt                     |  |                        |
  |    │                                                         |  | @book{greatgatsby      |
  |    └── ◻ note_canvas                                         |  |   ...                  |
  |           └ src:`data:welcome human\n@book{sunday...}`       |  | }                      |
  |                                                              |  +------------------------+
  |                                                              |
  +--------------------------------------------------------------+

   The enduser will only see welcome human and Hello friends rendered
   verbatim (see mimetype).  The beauty is that text in Data URI
   automatically promotes rich copy-paste (retaining metadata).  In both
   cases, the text gets rendered immediately (onto a plane geometry,
   hence the name '_canvas').  The XR Fragment-compatible browser can
   let the enduser access visual-meta(data)-fields after interacting
   with the object (contextmenu e.g.).

   |  additional tagging using bibs
   |  (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/hashtagbibs): to tag spatial
   |  object note_canvas with 'todo', the enduser can type or speak
   |  #note_canvas@todo

13.3.  XR Text example parser

   To prime the XRWG with text from plain text src-values, here's an
   example XR Text (de)multiplexer in javascript (which supports inline
   bibs & bibtex):

xrtext = {

  expandBibs: (text) => {
    let bibs   = { regex: /(#[a-zA-Z0-9_+@\-]+(#)?)/g, tags: {}}
    text.replace( bibs.regex , (m,k,v) => {
       tok   = m.substr(1).split("@")
       match = tok.shift()
       if( tok.length ) tok.map( (t) => bibs.tags[t] = `@${t}{${match},\n}` )
       else if( match.substr(-1) == '#' )
          bibs.tags[match] = `@{${match.replace(/#/,'')}}`
       else bibs.tags[match] = `@${match}{${match},\n}`
    })
    return text.replace( bibs.regex, '') + Object.values(bibs.tags).join('\n')
  },

  decode: (str) => {



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    // bibtex:     ↓@   ↓<tag|tag{phrase,|{ruler}>  ↓property  ↓end
    let pat    = [ /@/, /^\S+[,{}]/,                /},/,      /}/ ]
    let tags   = [], text='', i=0, prop=''
    let lines  = xrtext.expandBibs(str).replace(/\r?\n/g,'\n').split(/\n/)
    for( let i = 0; i < lines.length && !String(lines[i]).match( /^@/ ); i++ )
        text += lines[i]+'\n'

    bibtex = lines.join('\n').substr( text.length )
    bibtex.split( pat[0] ).map( (t) => {
        try{
           let v = {}
           if( !(t = t.trim())         ) return
           if( tag = t.match( pat[1] ) ) tag = tag[0]
           if( tag.match( /^{.*}$/ )   ) return tags.push({ruler:tag})
           if( tag.match( /}$/ )       ) return tags.push({k: tag.replace(/}$/,''), v: {}})
           t = t.substr( tag.length )
           t.split( pat[2] )
           .map( kv => {
             if( !(kv = kv.trim()) || kv == "}" ) return
             v[ kv.match(/\s?(\S+)\s?=/)[1] ] = kv.substr( kv.indexOf("{")+1 )
           })
           tags.push( { k:tag, v } )
        }catch(e){ console.error(e) }
    })
    return {text, tags}
  },

  encode: (text,tags) => {
    let str = text+"\n"
    for( let i in tags ){
      let item = tags[i]
      if( item.ruler ){
          str += `@${item.ruler}\n`
          continue;
      }
      str += `@${item.k}\n`
      for( let j in item.v ) str += `  ${j} = {${item.v[j]}}\n`
      str += `}\n`
    }
    return str
  }
}

   The above functions (de)multiplexe text/metadata, expands bibs,
   (de)serialize bibtex and vice versa

   |  above can be used as a startingpoint for LLVM's to translate/
   |  steelman to a more formal form/language.



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str = `
hello world
here are some hashtagbibs followed by bibtex:

#world
#hello@greeting
#another-section#

@{some-section}
@flap{
  asdf = {23423}
}`

var {tags,text} = xrtext.decode(str)          // demultiplex text & bibtex
tags.find( (t) => t.k == 'flap{' ).v.asdf = 1 // edit tag
tags.push({ k:'bar{', v:{abc:123} })          // add tag
console.log( xrtext.encode(text,tags) )       // multiplex text & bibtex back together

   This expands to the following (hidden by default) BibTex appendix:

   hello world
   here are some hashtagbibs followed by bibtex:

   @{some-section}
   @flap{
     asdf = {1}
   }
   @world{world,
   }
   @greeting{hello,
   }
   @{another-section}
   @bar{
     abc = {123}
   }

   |  when an XR browser updates the human text, a quick scan for
   |  nonmatching tags (@book{nonmatchingbook e.g.) should be performed
   |  and prompt the enduser for deleting them.

14.  Transclusion (broken link) resolution

   In spirit of Ted Nelson's 'transclusion resolution', there's a soft-
   mechanism to harden links & minimize broken links in various ways:

   1.  defining a different transport protocol (https vs ipfs or DAT) in
       src or href values can make a difference




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   2.  mirroring files on another protocol using (HTTP) errorcode tags
       in src or href properties
   3.  in case of src: nesting a copy of the embedded object in the
       placeholder object (embeddedObject) will not be replaced when the
       request fails

   |  due to the popularity, maturity and extensiveness of HTTP codes
   |  for client/server communication, non-HTTP protocols easily map to
   |  HTTP codes (ipfs ERR_NOT_FOUND maps to 404 e.g.)

   For example:

  +────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+
  │                                                        │
  │  index.gltf                                            │
  │    │                                                   │
  │    │ #: #q=-offlinetext                                │
  │    │                                                   │
  │    ├── ◻ buttonA                                       │
  │    │      └ href:     http://foo.io/campagne.fbx       │
  │    │      └ href@404: ipfs://foo.io/campagne.fbx       │
  │    │      └ href@400: #q=clienterrortext               │
  │    │      └ ◻ offlinetext                              │
  │    │                                                   │
  │    └── ◻ embeddedObject                          <--------- the meshdata inside embeddedObject will (not)
  │           └ src: https://foo.io/bar.gltf               │    be flushed when the request (does not) succeed.
  │           └ src@404: http://foo.io/bar.gltf            │    So worstcase the 3D data (of the time of publishing index.gltf)
  │           └ src@400: https://archive.org/l2kj43.gltf   │    will be displayed.
  │                                                        │
  +────────────────────────────────────────────────────────+

15.  Topic-based index-less Webrings

   As hashtags in URLs map to the XWRG, href-values can be used to
   promote topic-based index-less webrings.
   Consider 3D scenes linking to eachother using these href values:

   *  href: schoolA.edu/projects.gltf#math
   *  href: schoolB.edu/projects.gltf#math
   *  href: university.edu/projects.gltf#math

   These links would all show visible links to math-tagged objects in
   the scene.
   To filter out non-related objects one could take it a step further
   using queries:

   *  href: schoolA.edu/projects.gltf#math&q=-topics math
   *  href: schoolB.edu/projects.gltf#math&q=-courses math



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   *  href: university.edu/projects.gltf#math&q=-theme math

   |  This would hide all object tagged with topic, courses or theme
   |  (including math) so that later only objects tagged with math will
   |  be visible

   This makes spatial content multi-purpose, without the need to
   separate content into separate files, or show/hide things using a
   complex logiclayer like javascript.

16.  Security Considerations

   Since XR Text contains metadata too, the user should be able to set
   up tagging-rules, so the copy-paste feature can :

   *  filter out sensitive data when copy/pasting (XR text with
      tag:secret e.g.)

17.  FAQ

   *Q:* Why is everything HTTP GET-based, what about POST/PUT/DELETE
   HATEOS
   *A:* Because it's out of scope: XR Fragment specifies a read-only way
   to surf XR documents.  These things belong in the application layer
   (for example, an XR Hypermedia browser can decide to support
   POST/PUT/DELETE requests for embedded HTML thru src values)

   *Q:* Why isn't there support for scripting, while we have things like
   WASM *A:* This is out of scope as it unhyperifies hypermedia, and
   this is up to XR hypermedia browser-extensions.
   Historically scripting/Javascript seems to been able to turn webpages
   from hypermedia documents into its opposite (hyperscripted
   nonhypermedia documents).
   In order to prevent this backward-movement (hypermedia tends to
   liberate people from finnicky scripting) XR Fragments should never
   unhyperify itself by hardcoupling to a particular markup or scripting
   language.  XR Macro's (https://xrfragment.org/doc/RFC_XR_Macros.html)
   are an example of something which is probably smarter and safer for
   hypermedia browsers to implement, instead of going full-in with a
   turing-complete scripting language (and suffer the security
   consequences later).
   XR Fragments supports filtering objects in a scene only, because in
   the history of the javascript-powered web, showing/hiding document-
   entities seems to be one of the most popular basic usecases.
   Doing advanced scripting & networkrequests under the hood are
   obviously interesting endavours, but this is something which should
   not be hardcoupled with hypermedia.
   This belongs to browser extensions.



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   Non-HTML Hypermedia browsers should make browser extensions the right
   place, to 'extend' experiences, in contrast to code/javascript inside
   hypermedia documents (this turned out as a hypermedia antipattern).

18.  IANA Considerations

   This document has no IANA actions.

19.  Acknowledgments

   *  NLNET (https://nlnet.nl)
   *  Future of Text (https://futureoftext.org)
   *  visual-meta.info (https://visual-meta.info)

20.  Appendix: Definitions

    +=================+===============================================+
    | definition      | explanation                                   |
    +=================+===============================================+
    | human           | a sentient being who thinks fuzzy, absorbs,   |
    |                 | and shares thought (by plain text, not        |
    |                 | markuplanguage)                               |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | scene           | a (local/remote) 3D scene or 3D file          |
    |                 | (index.gltf e.g.)                             |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | 3D object       | an object inside a scene characterized by     |
    |                 | vertex-, face- and customproperty data.       |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | metadata        | custom properties of text, 3D Scene or        |
    |                 | Object(nodes), relevant to machines and a     |
    |                 | human minority (academics/developers)         |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | XR fragment     | URI Fragment with spatial hints like          |
    |                 | #pos=0,0,0&t=1,100 e.g.                       |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | the XRWG        | wordgraph (collapses 3D scene to tags)        |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | the hashbus     | hashtags map to camera/scene-projections      |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | spacetime       | positions camera, triggers scene-preset/time  |
    | hashtags        |                                               |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | teleportation   | repositioning the enduser to a different      |
    |                 | position (or 3D scene/file)                   |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | sourceportation | teleporting the enduser to the original XR    |
    |                 | Document of an src embedded object.           |



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    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | placeholder     | a 3D object which with src-metadata (which    |
    | object          | will be replaced by the src-data.)            |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | src             | (HTML-piggybacked) metadata of a 3D object    |
    |                 | which instances content                       |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | href            | (HTML-piggybacked) metadata of a 3D object    |
    |                 | which links to content                        |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | query           | an URI Fragment-operator which queries        |
    |                 | object(s) from a scene like #q=cube           |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | visual-meta     | visual-meta (https://visual.meta.info) data   |
    |                 | appended to text/books/papers which is        |
    |                 | indirectly visible/editable in XR.            |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | requestless     | metadata which never spawns new requests      |
    | metadata        | (unlike RDF/HTML, which can cause framerate-  |
    |                 | dropping, hence not used a lot in games)      |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | FPS             | frames per second in spatial experiences      |
    |                 | (games,VR,AR e.g.), should be as high as      |
    |                 | possible                                      |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | introspective   | inward sensemaking ("I feel this belongs to   |
    |                 | that")                                        |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | extrospective   | outward sensemaking ("I'm fairly sure John is |
    |                 | a person who lives in oklahoma")              |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | &#9723;         | ascii representation of an 3D object/mesh     |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | (un)obtrusive   | obtrusive: wrapping human text/thought in     |
    |                 | XML/HTML/JSON obfuscates human text into a    |
    |                 | salad of machine-symbols and words            |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | BibTeX          | simple tagging/citing/referencing standard    |
    |                 | for plaintext                                 |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | BibTag          | a BibTeX tag                                  |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+
    | (hashtag)bibs   | an easy to speak/type/scan tagging SDL (see   |
    |                 | here (https://github.com/coderofsalvation/    |
    |                 | hashtagbibs) which expands to BibTex/JSON/XML |
    +-----------------+-----------------------------------------------+

                                  Table 11



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