If this message is part of an conversation, the dataname answer_of@communication represents the id of the message this message is an answer/reply to..
Archived@status contains a boolean value telling wether or not this information has been archived and is therefor no longer considered actual.
If this message is based on or a forwarded copy of an other message, then based_on@communication holds the id of the original message.
The bcc@communication dataname is a list of id's of persons who have received this message, without reveiling to other receivers that the where on the receiving list. The account ids can have any form, depending on the communication system, but e-mail addresses and account ids are most common.
The cc@communication datanames holds an list of ids of persons whom also received this message, but where not the main receiver(s) of this message. That most likely only received the message as update, no reply is needed.
The main content of this message, i.e. the message itself. The message can be either as plain text or as html.
The main content of this informationdocument.
The exact moment the message was sent, written as an unix timestamp.
A description to describe the information in this item. A few lines or one paragraph of text.
The main email address of a person. This can be his or her personal or work email address.
The extension of a file, i.e. jpg, doc, pdf, etc. The extension is written is lowercase. The extension is not limited to three characters.
The id of the folder containing this file. Depending on the filesystem this can be a path or any auto generated id.
The id of the sender of the message. Depending on the system this could have any form: an email adress, an account id or an social media account id..
The full name of a person. This includes:
First name and middle names or initials. Last name (including any last name prefix). Maiden name
Heigh@image defines the height of an image in pixels.
Id@basic is an attribute that gives a value that is unique within the set of all id's of datasets of the same type. This can be an auto generated numeric id value, or any other numeric or textual value.
The id of the image used as visual. Depending on the system used, this can be a path or an auto generated id.
Login describes the username of a person within the system that provides this data.
The human readable name for this piece of information. The name you would use to call this item i a normal conversation.
The content of this document described in a single sentence.
If an image is an variation on a existing image, i.e. a scaled version, then original@image refers to the id of the original image.
The password of this password used within the system that provides this information. If the providing system encrypts/hashes the passwords, the hash of the password will be given instead of the original password.
If an image is a scaled variation of an original image, scaletype@image defines how the image is scaled:
scale : scaled to fit the width@image and height@image box as best as possible. The image retains its proportions..
The size of a file in bytes.
The subject of the message captured in a single line in plain text.
The title of de document this item of information represents.
The receiver(s) of this message. The value of this attribute can be either a single id or a list of ids. Depending on the system an id can be any form, i.
Describes the information in this document in only two lines.
The url to the source of this content.
Userlevel describes the minimum userlevel a person needs to have to be granted access to data. The range of available userlevels depend on the system that provides the userlevels, but a range from 0 to 1000 is adviced.
Width@image defines the width of an image in pixels.