draft
optional
This document standardizes the treatment given by clients of inline references of other events and profiles inside the .content
of any event that has readable text in its .content
(such as kinds 1 and 30023).
When creating an event, clients should include mentions to other profiles and to other events in the middle of the .content
using NIP-21 codes, such as nostr:nprofile1qqsw3dy8cpu...6x2argwghx6egsqstvg
.
Including NIP-10-style tags (["e", <hex-id>, <relay-url>, <marker>]
) for each reference is optional, clients should do it whenever they want the profile being mentioned to be notified of the mention, or when they want the referenced event to recognize their mention as a reply.
A reader client that receives an event with such nostr:...
mentions in its .content
can do any desired context augmentation (for example, linking to the profile or showing a preview of the mentioned event contents) it wants in the process. If turning such mentions into links, they could become internal links, NIP-21 links or direct links to web clients that will handle these references.
Suppose Bob is writing a note in a client that has search-and-autocomplete functionality for users that is triggered when they write the character @
.
As Bob types "hello @mat"
the client will prompt him to autocomplete with mattn's profile, showing a picture and name.
Bob presses "enter" and now he sees his typed note as "hello @mattn"
, @mattn
is highlighted, indicating that it is a mention. Internally, however, the event looks like this:
{
"content": "hello nostr:nprofile1qqszclxx9f5haga8sfjjrulaxncvkfekj097t6f3pu65f86rvg49ehqj6f9dh",
"created_at": 1679790774,
"id": "f39e9b451a73d62abc5016cffdd294b1a904e2f34536a208874fe5e22bbd47cf",
"kind": 1,
"pubkey": "79be667ef9dcbbac55a06295ce870b07029bfcdb2dce28d959f2815b16f81798",
"sig": "f8c8bab1b90cc3d2ae1ad999e6af8af449ad8bb4edf64807386493163e29162b5852a796a8f474d6b1001cddbaac0de4392838574f5366f03cc94cf5dfb43f4d",
"tags": [
[
"p",
"2c7cc62a697ea3a7826521f3fd34f0cb273693cbe5e9310f35449f43622a5cdc"
]
]
}
(Alternatively, the mention could have been a nostr:npub1...
URL.)
After Bob publishes this event and Carol sees it, her client will initially display the .content
as it is, but later it will parse the .content
and see that there is a nostr:
URL in there, decode it, extract the public key from it (and possibly relay hints), fetch that profile from its internal database or relays, then replace the full URL with the name @mattn
, with a link to the internal page view for that profile.
- The example above was very concrete, but it doesn't mean all clients have to implement the same flow. There could be clients that do not support autocomplete at all, so they just allow users to paste raw NIP-19 codes into the body of text, then prefix these with
nostr:
before publishing the event. - The flow for referencing other events is similar: a user could paste a
note1...
ornevent1...
code and the client will turn that into anostr:note1...
ornostr:nevent1...
URL. Then upon reading such references the client may show the referenced note in a preview box or something like that -- or nothing at all. - Other display procedures can be employed: for example, if a client that is designed for dealing with only
kind:1
text notes sees, for example, akind:30023
nostr:naddr1...
URL reference in the.content
, it can, for example, decide to turn that into a link to some hardcoded webapp capable of displaying such events. - Clients may give the user the option to include or not include tags for mentioned events or profiles. If someone wants to mention
mattn
without notifying them, but still have a nice augmentable/clickable link to their profile inside their note, they can instruct their client to not create a["p", ...]
tag for that specific mention. - In the same way, if someone wants to reference another note but their reference is not meant to show up along other replies to that same note, their client can choose to not include a corresponding
["e", ...]
tag for any givennostr:nevent1...
URL inside.content
. Clients may decide to expose these advanced functionalities to users or be more opinionated about things.