Îõ³h$€žß      !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[\]^None8&# json-feedÐSpecifies how long it takes to listen to or watch, when played at normal speed. json-feed.Specifies the type of the attachment, such as  audio/mpeg. json-feed Specifies how large the file is. json-feed¹Is a name for the attachment. Important: if there are multiple attachments, and two or more have the exact same title (when title is present), then they are considered as alternate representations of the same thing. In this way a podcaster, for instance, might provide an audio recording in different formats. json-feed)Specifies the location of the attachment. json-feedìLists related resources. Podcasts, for instance, would include an attachment that's an audio or video file. json-feed(Has the same structure as the top-level +â. If not specified in an item, then the top-level author, if present, is the author of the item. json-feedÕThe URL of an image to use as a banner. Some blogging systems (such as Medium) display a different banner image chosen to go with each post, but that image wouldn't otherwise appear in the content_html. A feed reader with a detail view may choose to show this banner image at the top of the detail view, possibly with the title overlaid. json-feed and ® are each optional strings --- but one or both must be present. This is the HTML or plain text of the item. Important: the only place HTML is allowed in this format is in #. A Twitter-like service might use , while a blog might use ï. Use whichever makes sense for your resource. (It doesn't even have to be the same for each item in a feed.) json-feedSee . json-feed3Specifies the modification date in RFC 3339 format. json-feed2Specifies the date in RFC 3339 format. (Example: 2010-02-07T14:04:00-05:00.) json-feedÊThe URL of a page elsewhere. This is especially useful for linkblogs. If #4 links to where you're talking about a thing, then ) links to the thing you're talking about. json-feedèUnique for the item in the feed over time. If an item is ever updated, the ID should be unchanged. New items should never use a previously-used ID. If an ID is presented as a number or other type, a JSON Feed reader must coerce it to a string. Ideally, the ID is the full URL of the resource described by the item, since URLs make great unique identifiers. json-feedËThe URL of the main image for the item. This image may also appear in the » --- if so, it's a hint to the feed reader that this is the main, featured image. Feed readers may use the image as a preview (probably resized as a thumbnail and placed in a timeline).  json-feed’A plain text sentence or two describing the item. This might be presented in a timeline, for instance, where a detail view would display all of  or .! json-feedßCan have any plain text values you want. Tags tend to be just one word, but they may be anything. Note: they are not the equivalent of Twitter hashtags. Some blogging systems and other feed formats call these categories." json-feed:Plain text. Microblog items in particular may omit titles.# json-feedˆThe URL of the resource described by the item. It's the permalink. This may be the same as the ID --- but should be present regardless.& json-feedÚThe URL for an image for the author. As with icon, it should be square and relatively large --- such as 512 x 512 --- and should use transparency where appropriate, since it may be rendered on a non-white background.' json-feedThe author's name.( json-feedÒThe URL of a site owned by the author. It could be a blog, micro-blog, Twitter account, and so on. Ideally the linked-to page provides a way to contact the author, but that's not required. The URL could be a mailto:, link, though we suspect that will be rare.+ json-feed˜The feed author. The author object has several members. These are all optional --- but if you provide an author object, then at least one is required., json-feedèProvides more detail, beyond the title, on what the feed is about. A feed reader may display this text.- json-feedÃSays whether or not the feed is finished --- that is, whether or not it will ever update again. A feed for a temporary event, such as an instance of the Olympics, could expire. If the value is _9, then it's expired. Any other value, or the absence of -), means the feed may continue to update.. json-feedÇThe URL of an image for the feed suitable to be used in a source list. It should be square and relatively small, but not smaller than 64 x 64 (so that it can look good on retina displays). As with 2í, this image should use transparency where appropriate, since it may be rendered on a non-white background./ json-feedÐThe URL of the feed, and serves as the unique identifier for the feed. As with 0Â, this should be considered required for feeds on the public web.0 json-feedæThe URL of the resource that the feed describes. This resource may or may not actually be a "home" page, but it should be an HTML page. If a feed is published on the public web, this should be considered as required. But it may not make sense in the case of a file created on a desktop computer, when that file is not shared or is shared only privately.1 json-feed«Describes endpoints that can be used to subscribe to real-time notifications from the publisher of this feed. Each object has a type and URL, both of which are required.2 json-feedáThe URL of an image for the feed suitable to be used in a timeline, much the way an avatar might be used. It should be square and relatively large --- such as 512 x 512 --- so that it can be scaled-down and so that it can look good on retina displays. It should use transparency where appropriate, since it may be rendered on a non-white background.3 json-feed:An array of objects that describe each object in the list.4 json-feed)The URL of a feed that provides the next n items, where n® is determined by the publisher. This allows for pagination, but with the expectation that reader software is not required to use it and probably won't use it very often. 4 must not be the same as /,, and it must not be the same as a previous 4 (to avoid infinite loops).5 json-feedûThe name of the feed, which will often correspond to the name of the website (blog, for instance), though not necessarily.6 json-feedˆA description of the purpose of the feed. This is for the use of people looking at the raw JSON, and should be ignored by feed readers.7 json-feed3The URL of the version of the format the feed uses.:  !"#$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:89)*+,-./01234567$%&'( !"#  à        !"#$$%&'()*+,-./0123456789:;<=>?@ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ[Ü(json-feed-2.0.0.3-LZbR0TJwJfQ6MccNbdUSfeJsonFeedUrlurlValueMime mimeValueHtml htmlValueHubhubTypehubUrl AttachmentattachmentDurationInSecondsattachmentMimeTypeattachmentSizeInBytesattachmentTitle attachmentUrlItemitemAttachments itemAuthoritemBannerImageitemContentHtmlitemContentTextitemDateModifieditemDatePublisheditemExternalUrlitemId itemImage itemSummaryitemTags itemTitleitemUrlAuthor authorAvatar authorName authorUrlFeed feedAuthorfeedDescription feedExpired feedFavicon feedFeedUrlfeedHomePageUrlfeedHubsfeedIcon feedItems feedNextUrl feedTitlefeedUserComment feedVersion parseFeed renderFeed $fToJSONHtml$fFromJSONHtml $fToJSONMime$fFromJSONMime $fToJSONUrl $fFromJSONUrl $fToJSONHub $fFromJSONHub$fToJSONAttachment$fFromJSONAttachment$fToJSONAuthor$fFromJSONAuthor $fToJSONItem$fFromJSONItem $fToJSONFeed$fFromJSONFeed$fEqFeed $fGenericFeed $fShowFeed$fEqItem $fGenericItem $fShowItem $fEqAuthor$fGenericAuthor $fShowAuthor$fEqAttachment$fGenericAttachment$fShowAttachment$fEqHub $fGenericHub $fShowHub$fEqUrl $fShowUrl$fEqMime $fShowMime$fEqHtml $fShowHtmlghc-prim GHC.TypesTrue