RDF::Turtle reader/writer
Turtle reader/writer for RDF.rb .
Description
This is a Ruby implementation of a Turtle parser for RDF.rb.
Features
RDF::Turtle parses Turtle and N-Triples into statements or triples. It also serializes to Turtle.
Install with gem install rdf-turtle
- 100% free and unencumbered public domain software.
- Implements a complete parser for Turtle.
- Compatible with Ruby >= 3.0.
- Optional streaming writer, to serialize large graphs
- Provisional support for RDF 1.2.
Usage
Instantiate a reader from a local file:
graph = RDF::Graph.load("etc/doap.ttl", format: :ttl)
Define @base
and @prefix
definitions, and use for serialization using :base_uri
an :prefixes
options.
Canonicalize and validate using :canonicalize
and :validate
options.
Write a graph to a file:
RDF::Turtle::Writer.open("etc/test.ttl") do |writer|
writer << graph
end
RDF 1.2
Both reader and writer include provisional support for RDF 1.2 triple terms.
Both reader and writer include provisional support for RDF 1.2 directional language-tagged strings, which are literals of type rdf:dirLangString
having both a language
and direction
.
Internally, an RDF::Statement
is treated as another resource, along with RDF::URI
and RDF::Node
, which allows an RDF::Statement
to have a #subject
or #object
which is also an RDF::Statement
.
Note: This feature is subject to change or elimination as the standards process progresses.
Serializing a Graph containing reified triples
require 'rdf/turtle'
triple = RDF::Statement(RDF::URI('bob'), RDF::Vocab::FOAF.age, RDF::Literal(23))
graph = RDF::Graph.new << [RDF::URI('r'), RDF::URI("ex:certainty"), RDF::Literal(0.9)]
graph << RDF::Statement(RDF::URI('r'), RDF.reifies, triple)
graph.dump(:ttl, validate: false, standard_prefixes: true)
# => '<<<bob> foaf:age 23>> <ex:certainty> 9.0e-1 .'
Reading a Graph containing reified triples
By default, the Turtle reader will reject a document containing a subject resource.
ttl = %(
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .
@prefix ex: <http://example.com/> .
<<<bob> foaf:age 23>> ex:certainty 9.0e-1 .
)
graph = RDF::Graph.new do |graph|
RDF::Turtle::Reader.new(ttl) {|reader| graph << reader}
end
# => RDF::ReaderError
Readers support a boolean valued rdfstar
option; only one statement is asserted, although the reified statement is contained within the graph.
graph = RDF::Graph.new do |graph|
RDF::Turtle::Reader.new(ttl, rdfstar: true) {|reader| graph << reader}
end
graph.count #=> 2
Reading a Graph containing statement annotations
Annotations are introduced using the {| ... |}
syntax, which is treated like a blankNodePropertyList
,
where the subject is the the triple ending with that annotation.
ttl = %(
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .
@prefix ex: <http://example.com/> .
<bob> foaf:age 23 {| ex:certainty 9.0e-1 |} .
)
graph = RDF::Graph.new do |graph|
RDF::Turtle::Reader.new(ttl) {|reader| graph << reader}
end
# => RDF::Graph.new do |g|
triple = RDF::Statement.new(RDF::URI('bob'), RDF::FOAF.age, RDF::Literal(23))
bn = RDF::Node.new('anno)
g << triple
g << RDF::Statement.new(bn, RDF.reifies, triple)
g << RDF::Statement.new(bn, RDF::URI("http://example.com/certainty"), RDF::Literal.new(9.0e-1))
end
Annotations can also have a reifier identifier
ttl = %(
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .
@prefix ex: <http://example.com/> .
<bob> foaf:age 23 ~ ex:anno {| ex:certainty 9.0e-1 |} .
)
Note that this requires the rdfstar
option to be set.
Documentation
Full documentation available on Rubydoc.info
Principle Classes
Variations from the spec
In some cases, the specification is unclear on certain issues:
- The LC version of the Turtle specification separates rules for
@base
and@prefix
with closing '.' from the SPARQL-likeBASE
andPREFIX
without closing '.'. This version implements a more flexible syntax where the@
and closing.
are optional andbase/prefix
are matched case independently. - Additionally, both
a
andA
matchrdf:type
.
Freebase-specific Reader
There is a special reader useful for processing Freebase Dumps. To invoke
this, add the freebase: true
option to the RDF::Turtle::Reader.new, or
use RDF::Turtle::FreebaseReader directly. As with RDF::Turtle::Reader,
prefix definitions may be passed in using the :prefixes
option to
RDF::Turtle::FreebaseReader} using the standard mechanism defined
for RDF::Reader
.
The Freebase Dumps have a very normalized form, similar to N-Triples but with prefixes. They also have a large amount of garbage. This Reader is optimized for this format and will perform faster error recovery.
An example of reading Freebase dumps:
require "rdf/turtle"
fb = "../freebase/freebase-rdf-2013-03-03-00-00.ttl"
fb_prefixes = {
ns: "http://rdf.freebase.com/ns/",
key: "http://rdf.freebase.com/key/",
owl: "http://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#>",
rdfs: "http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#",
rdf: "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#",
xsd: "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#"
}
RDF::Turtle::Reader.open(fb,
freebase: true,
prefixes: fb_prefixes) do |r|
r.each_statement {|stmt| puts stmt.to_ntriples}
end
Implementation Notes
This version uses a hand-written parser using the Lexer from the EBNF gem instead of a general EBNF LL(1) parser for faster performance.
Change Log
Dependencies
Installation
The recommended installation method is via RubyGems.
To install the latest official release of the RDF::Turtle
gem, do:
% [sudo] gem install rdf-turtle
Mailing List
Author
Contributing
This repository uses Git Flow to mange development and release activity. All submissions must be on a feature branch based on the develop branch to ease staging and integration.
- Do your best to adhere to the existing coding conventions and idioms.
- Don't use hard tabs, and don't leave trailing whitespace on any line.
- Do document every method you add using YARD annotations. Read the tutorial or just look at the existing code for examples.
- Don't touch the
.gemspec
,VERSION
orAUTHORS
files. If you need to change them, do so on your private branch only. - Do feel free to add yourself to the
CREDITS
file and the corresponding list in the theREADME
. Alphabetical order applies. - Do note that in order for us to merge any non-trivial changes (as a rule of thumb, additions larger than about 15 lines of code), we need an explicit public domain dedication on record from you, which you will be asked to agree to on the first commit to a repo within the organization. Note that the agreement applies to all repos in the Ruby RDF organization.
License
This is free and unencumbered public domain software. For more information, see https://unlicense.org/ or the accompanying UNLICENSE file.
A copy of the Turtle EBNF and derived parser files are included in the repository, which are not covered under the UNLICENSE. These files are covered via the W3C Document License.