HL7 Terminology (THO)
6.0.0 - Publication International flag

This page is part of the HL7 Terminology (v6.0.0: Release) based on FHIR (HL7® FHIR® Standard) v5.0.0. This is the current published version in its permanent home (it will always be available at this URL). For a full list of available versions, see the Directory of published versions

NamingSystem: Internationalized Resource Identifier (IRI)

Official URL: http://terminology.hl7.org/NamingSystem/iri Version: 1.0.0
Active as of 2023-03-16 Computable Name: IRI

As defined by RFC 3987 (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt). Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs) are the internationalized version of URIs (which are also defined as a NamingSystem as https://terminology.hl7.org/4.0.0/NamingSystem-uri.html) that allow Unicode characters to be used in the identifier with some restrictions, which was defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in 2005. An IRI such as ‘https://hi.wikipedia.org/wiki/हृदय’ can be percent-encoded into the URI ‘https://hi.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E0%A4%B9%E0%A5%83%E0%A4%A6%E0%A4%AF’ to be used as a URL, but the IRI is easier to read, particularly for readers of non-Latin languages, and is natively supported by many tools, including many browsers, HTTP libraries, and in the Resource Description Framework (RDF).

Generated Narrative: NamingSystem iri

Summary

Defining URLhttp://terminology.hl7.org/NamingSystem/iri
Version1.0.0
NameIRI
TitleInternationalized Resource Identifier (IRI)
Statusactive
Definition

As defined by RFC 3987 (http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt). Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs) are the internationalized version of URIs (which are also defined as a NamingSystem as https://terminology.hl7.org/4.0.0/NamingSystem-uri.html) that allow Unicode characters to be used in the identifier with some restrictions, which was defined by the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) in 2005. An IRI such as 'https://hi.wikipedia.org/wiki/हृदय' can be percent-encoded into the URI 'https://hi.wikipedia.org/wiki/%E0%A4%B9%E0%A5%83%E0%A4%A6%E0%A4%AF' to be used as a URL, but the IRI is easier to read, particularly for readers of non-Latin languages, and is natively supported by many tools, including many browsers, HTTP libraries, and in the Resource Description Framework (RDF).

Identifiers

TypeValuePreferred
URIurn:ietf:rfc:3987true

History

DateActionCustodianAuthorComment
2023-06-17createITSGaurav VaidyaAdd IRIs to the External Known Identifier Systems; up-406