- rdf(?S, ?P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf(?S, ?P, ?O, ?G) is nondet
- True if an RDF triple <S,P,O> exists, optionally in the graph G.
The object O is either a resource (atom) or one of the terms
listed below. The described types apply for the case where O is
unbound. If O is instantiated it is converted according to the
rules described with rdf_assert/3.
Triples consist of the following three terms:
- Blank nodes are encoded by atoms that start with `_:`.
- IRIs appear in two notations:
- Full IRIs are encoded by atoms that do not start with
`_:`. Specifically, an IRI term is not required to follow
the IRI standard grammar.
- Abbreviated IRI notation that allows IRI prefix aliases
that are registered by rdf_register_prefix/[2,3] to be
used. Their notation is
Alias:Local
, where Alias and
Local are atoms. Each abbreviated IRI is expanded by the
system to a full IRI.
- Literals appear in two notations:
- @(String, Lang)
- A language-tagged string, where String is a Prolog string
and Lang is an atom.
- ^^(Value, Type)
- A type qualified literal. For unknown types, Value is a
Prolog string. If type is known, the Prolog representations
from the table below are used.
Datatype IRI | Prolog term |
xsd:float | float |
xsd:double | float |
xsd:decimal | float (1) |
xsd:integer | integer |
XSD integer sub-types | integer |
xsd:boolean | true or false |
xsd:date | date(Y,M,D) |
xsd:dateTime | date_time(Y,M,D,HH,MM,SS) (2,3) |
xsd:gDay | integer |
xsd:gMonth | integer |
xsd:gMonthDay | month_day(M,D) |
xsd:gYear | integer |
xsd:gYearMonth | year_month(Y,M) |
xsd:time | time(HH,MM,SS) (2) |
Notes:
(1) The current implementation of xsd:decimal
values
as floats is formally incorrect. Future versions
of SWI-Prolog may introduce decimal as a subtype
of rational.
(2) SS fields denote the number of seconds. This can
either be an integer or a float.
(3) The date_time
structure can have a 7th field that
denotes the timezone offset in seconds as an
integer.
In addition, a ground object value is translated into a
properly typed RDF literal using rdf_canonical_literal/2.
There is a fine distinction in how duplicate statements are
handled in rdf/[3,4]: backtracking over rdf/3 will never return
duplicate triples that appear in multiple graphs. rdf/4 will
return such duplicate triples, because their graph term differs.
- Arguments:
-
S | - is the subject term. It is either a blank node or IRI. |
P | - is the predicate term. It is always an IRI. |
O | - is the object term. It is either a literal, a blank
node or IRI (except for true and false that denote the
values of datatype XSD boolean). |
G | - is the graph term. It is always an IRI. |
- See also
- - Triple pattern querying
- - xsd_number_string/2 and xsd_time_string/3 are used to
convert between lexical representations and Prolog terms.
- rdf_has(?S, +P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf_has(?S, +P, ?O, -RealP) is nondet
- Similar to rdf/3 and rdf/4, but P matches all predicates that
are defined as an rdfs:subPropertyOf of P. This predicate also
recognises the predicate properties
inverse_of
and
symmetric
. See rdf_set_predicate/2.
- rdf_update(+S, +P, +O, ++Action) is det
- rdf_update(+S, +P, +O, +G, ++Action) is det
- Replaces one of the three (four) fields on the matching triples
depending on Action:
- subject(Resource)
- Changes the first field of the triple.
- predicate(Resource)
- Changes the second field of the triple.
- object(Object)
- Changes the last field of the triple to the given resource or
literal(Value)
.
- graph(Graph)
- Moves the triple from its current named graph to Graph.
This only works with rdf_update/5 and throws an error when
used with rdf_update/4.
The argument matching Action must be ground. If this argument is
equivalent to the current value, no action is performed. Otherwise,
the requested action is performed on all matching triples. For
example, all resources typed rdfs:Class
can be changed to
owl:Class
using
?- rdf_update(_, rdf:type, rdfs:'Class',
object(owl:'Class')).
- Errors
- - instantiation_error if Action or the matching argument is
not ground.
- -
domain_error(rdf_update_action, Action)
if Action is not
one of the above terms.
- rdf_reachable(?S, +P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf_reachable(?S, +P, ?O, +MaxD, -D) is nondet
- True when O can be reached from S using the transitive closure
of P. The predicate uses (the internals of) rdf_has/3 and thus
matches both rdfs:subPropertyOf and the
inverse_of
and
symmetric
predicate properties. The version rdf_reachable/5
maximizes the steps considered and returns the number of steps
taken.
If both S and O are given, these predicates are semidet
. The
number of steps D is minimal because the implementation uses
breadth first search.
- rdf_assert(+S, +P, +O) is det
- rdf_assert(+S, +P, +O, +G) is det
- Assert a new triple. If O is a literal, certain Prolog terms are
translated to typed RDF literals. These conversions are
described with rdf_canonical_literal/2.
If a type is provided using Value^^Type syntax, additional
conversions are performed. All types accept either an atom or
Prolog string holding a valid RDF lexical value for the type and
xsd:float and xsd:double accept a Prolog integer.
- rdf_retractall(?S, ?P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf_retractall(?S, ?P, ?O, ?G) is nondet
- Remove all matching triples from the database. Matching is
performed using the same rules as rdf/3. The call does not
instantiate any of its arguments.
- rdf_compare(-Diff, +Left, +Right) is det
- True if the RDF terms Left and Right are ordered according to
the comparison operator Diff. The ordering is defines as:
- Literal < BNode < IRI
- For literals
- Numeric < non-numeric
- Numeric literals are ordered by value. If both are
equal, floats are ordered before integers.
- Other data types are ordered lexicographically.
- BNodes and IRIs are ordered lexicographically.
Note that this ordering is a complete ordering of RDF terms that
is consistent with the partial ordering defined by SPARQL.
- Arguments:
-
Diff | - is one of < , = or > |
- {+Where} is semidet
- rdf_where(+Where) is semidet
- Formulate constraints on RDF terms, notably literals. These are
intended to be used as illustrated below. RDF constraints are
pure: they may be placed before, after or inside a graph pattern
and, provided the code contains no commit operations (!, ->),
the semantics of the goal remains the same. Preferably,
constraints are placed before the graph pattern as they often
help the RDF database to exploit its literal indexes. In the
example below, the database can choose between using the subject
and/or predicate hash or the ordered literal table.
{ Date >= "2000-01-01"^^xsd:date },
rdf(S, P, Date)
The following constraints are currently defined:
- (>),(>=),(==),(=<),(<)
- The comparison operators are defined between numbers (of any
recognised type), typed literals of the same type and
langStrings of the same language.
- prefix(String, Pattern)
- substring(String, Pattern)
- word(String, Pattern)
- like(String, Pattern)
- icase(String, Pattern)
- Text matching operators that act on both typed literals
and langStrings.
- lang_matches(Term, Pattern)
- Demands a full RDF term (Text@Lang) or a plain Lang term
to match the language pattern Pattern.
The predicates rdf_where/1 and {}/1 are identical. The
rdf_where/1 variant is provided to avoid ambiguity in
applications where {}/1 is used for other purposes. Note that it
is also possible to write rdf11:{...}
.
- rdf_default_graph(-Graph) is det
- rdf_default_graph(-Old, +New) is det
- Query/set the notion of the default graph. The notion of the
default graph is local to a thread. Threads created inherit the
default graph from their creator. See set_prolog_flag/2.
- rdf_canonical_literal(++In, -Literal) is det
- Transform a relaxed literal specification as allowed for
rdf_assert/3 into its canonical form. The following Prolog terms
are translated:
Prolog Term | Datatype IRI |
float | xsd:double |
integer | xsd:integer |
string | xsd:string |
true or false | xsd:boolean |
date(Y,M,D) | xsd:date |
date_time(Y,M,D,HH,MM,SS) | xsd:dateTime |
date_time(Y,M,D,HH,MM,SS,TZ) | xsd:dateTime |
month_day(M,D) | xsd:gMonthDay |
year_month(Y,M) | xsd:gYearMonth |
time(HH,MM,SS) | xsd:time |
For example:
?- rdf_canonical_literal(42, X).
X = 42^^'http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer'.
- rdf_lexical_form(++Literal, -Lexical:compound) is det
- True when Lexical is the lexical form for the literal Literal.
Lexical is of one of the forms below. The ntriples serialization
is obtained by transforming String into a proper ntriples string
using double quotes and escaping where needed and turning Type
into a proper IRI reference.
- invalid_lexical_form_hook(+Type, +Lexical, -Prolog)[multifile]
- This hook is called if translation of the lexical form to the Prolog
representation fails due to a syntax error. By default it is not
defined, causing such invalid triples to be silently ignored.
- rdf_term(?Term) is nondet
- True if Term appears in the RDF database. Term is either an IRI,
literal or blank node and may appear in any position of any
triple. If Term is ground, it is pre-processed as the object
argument of rdf_assert/3 and the predicate is semidet.
- rdf_literal(?Term) is nondet
- True if Term is a known literal. If Term is ground, it is
pre-processed as the object argument of rdf_assert/3 and the
predicate is semidet.
- rdf_bnode(?BNode) is nondet
- True if BNode is a currently known blank node. The predicate is
semidet if BNode is ground.
- rdf_iri(?IRI) is nondet
- True if IRI is a current IRI. The predicate is semidet if IRI
is ground.
- rdf_name(?Name) is nondet
- True if Name is a current IRI or literal. The predicate is
semidet if Name is ground.
- rdf_subject(?S) is nondet
- True when S is a currently known subject, i.e. it appears in
the subject position of some visible triple. The predicate is
semidet if S is ground.
- rdf_predicate(?P) is nondet
- True when P is a currently known predicate, i.e. it appears in
the predicate position of some visible triple. The predicate is
semidet if P is ground.
- rdf_object(?O) is nondet
- True when O is a currently known object, i.e. it appears in the
object position of some visible triple. If Term is ground, it is
pre-processed as the object argument of rdf_assert/3 and the
predicate is semidet.
- rdf_node(?T) is nondet
- True when T appears in the subject or object position of a known
triple, i.e., is a node in the RDF graph.
- rdf_create_bnode(--BNode)
- Create a new BNode. A blank node is an atom starting with
_:
. Blank nodes generated by this predicate are of the form
_:genid
followed by a unique integer.
- rdf_is_iri(@IRI) is semidet
- True if IRI is an RDF IRI term.
For performance reasons, this does not check for compliance to
the syntax defined in RFC
3987. This checks
whether the term is (1) an atom and (2) not a blank node
identifier.
Success of this goal does not imply that the IRI is present in
the database (see rdf_iri/1 for that).
- rdf_is_bnode(@Term) is semidet
- True if Term is an RDF blank node identifier.
A blank node is represented by an atom that starts with
_:
.
Success of this goal does not imply that the blank node is
present in the database (see rdf_bnode/1 for that).
For backwards compatibility, atoms that are represented with
an atom that starts with __
are also considered to be a
blank node.
- rdf_is_literal(@Term) is semidet
- True if Term is an RDF literal term.
An RDF literal term is of the form `String@LanguageTag or
Value^^Datatype`.
Success of this goal does not imply that the literal is
well-formed or that it is present in the database (see
rdf_literal/1 for that).
- rdf_is_name(@Term) is semidet
- True if Term is an RDF Name, i.e., an IRI or literal.
Success of this goal does not imply that the name is
well-formed or that it is present in the database (see
rdf_name/1 for that).
- rdf_is_object(@Term) is semidet
- True if Term can appear in the object position of a triple.
Success of this goal does not imply that the object term in
well-formed or that it is present in the database (see
rdf_object/1 for that).
Since any RDF term can appear in the object position, this is
equaivalent to rdf_is_term/1.
- rdf_is_predicate(@Term) is semidet
- True if Term can appear in the predicate position of a triple.
Success of this goal does not imply that the predicate term is
present in the database (see rdf_predicate/1 for that).
Since only IRIs can appear in the predicate position, this is
equivalent to rdf_is_iri/1.
- rdf_is_subject(@Term) is semidet
- True if Term can appear in the subject position of a triple.
Only blank nodes and IRIs can appear in the subject position.
Success of this goal does not imply that the subject term is
present in the database (see rdf_subject/1 for that).
Since blank nodes are represented by atoms that start with
`_:` and an IRIs are atoms as well, this is equivalent to
atom(Term)
.
- rdf_is_term(@Term) is semidet
- True if Term can be used as an RDF term, i.e., if Term is
either an IRI, a blank node or an RDF literal.
Success of this goal does not imply that the RDF term is
present in the database (see rdf_term/1 for that).
- rdf_list(?RDFTerm) is semidet
- True if RDFTerm is a proper RDF list. This implies that every
node in the list has an
rdf:first
and rdf:rest
property and
the list ends in rdf:nil
.
If RDFTerm is unbound, RDFTerm is bound to each maximal RDF
list. An RDF list is maximal if there is no triple rdf(_,
rdf:rest, RDFList)
.
- rdf_list(+RDFList, -PrologList) is det
- True when PrologList represents the rdf:first objects for all
cells in RDFList. Note that this can be non-deterministic if
cells have multiple rdf:first or rdf:rest triples.
- rdf_length(+RDFList, -Length:nonneg) is nondet
- True when Length is the number of cells in RDFList. Note that a
list cell may have multiple rdf:rest triples, which makes this
predicate non-deterministic. This predicate does not check
whether the list cells have associated values (rdf:first). The
list must end in rdf:nil.
- rdf_member(?Member, +RDFList) is nondet
- True when Member is a member of RDFList
- rdf_nextto(?X, ?Y) is nondet
- rdf_nextto(?X, ?Y, ?RdfList) is nondet
- True if Y directly follows X in RdfList.
- rdf_nth0(?Index, +RDFList, ?X) is nondet
- rdf_nth1(?Index, +RDFList, ?X) is nondet
- True when X is the Index-th element (0-based or 1-based) of
RDFList. This predicate is deterministic if Index is given and
the list has no multiple rdf:first or rdf:rest values.
- rdf_last(+RDFList, -Last) is det
- True when Last is the last element of RDFList. Note that if the
last cell has multiple rdf:first triples, this predicate becomes
nondet.
- rdf_estimate_complexity(?S, ?P, ?O, -Estimate) is det
- rdf_assert_list(+PrologList, ?RDFList) is det
- rdf_assert_list(+PrologList, ?RDFList, +Graph) is det
- Create an RDF list from the given Prolog List. PrologList must
be a proper Prolog list and all members of the list must be
acceptable as object for rdf_assert/3. If RDFList is unbound and
PrologList is not empty, rdf_create_bnode/1 is used to create
RDFList.
- rdf_retract_list(+RDFList) is det
- Retract the rdf:first, rdf:rest and rdf:type=rdf:'List' triples
from all nodes reachable through rdf:rest. Note that other
triples that exist on the nodes are left untouched.
The following predicates are exported from this file while their implementation is defined in imported modules or non-module files loaded by this module.
- rdf(?S, ?P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf(?S, ?P, ?O, ?G) is nondet
- True if an RDF triple <S,P,O> exists, optionally in the graph G.
The object O is either a resource (atom) or one of the terms
listed below. The described types apply for the case where O is
unbound. If O is instantiated it is converted according to the
rules described with rdf_assert/3.
Triples consist of the following three terms:
- Blank nodes are encoded by atoms that start with `_:`.
- IRIs appear in two notations:
- Full IRIs are encoded by atoms that do not start with
`_:`. Specifically, an IRI term is not required to follow
the IRI standard grammar.
- Abbreviated IRI notation that allows IRI prefix aliases
that are registered by rdf_register_prefix/[2,3] to be
used. Their notation is
Alias:Local
, where Alias and
Local are atoms. Each abbreviated IRI is expanded by the
system to a full IRI.
- Literals appear in two notations:
- @(String, Lang)
- A language-tagged string, where String is a Prolog string
and Lang is an atom.
- ^^(Value, Type)
- A type qualified literal. For unknown types, Value is a
Prolog string. If type is known, the Prolog representations
from the table below are used.
Datatype IRI | Prolog term |
xsd:float | float |
xsd:double | float |
xsd:decimal | float (1) |
xsd:integer | integer |
XSD integer sub-types | integer |
xsd:boolean | true or false |
xsd:date | date(Y,M,D) |
xsd:dateTime | date_time(Y,M,D,HH,MM,SS) (2,3) |
xsd:gDay | integer |
xsd:gMonth | integer |
xsd:gMonthDay | month_day(M,D) |
xsd:gYear | integer |
xsd:gYearMonth | year_month(Y,M) |
xsd:time | time(HH,MM,SS) (2) |
Notes:
(1) The current implementation of xsd:decimal
values
as floats is formally incorrect. Future versions
of SWI-Prolog may introduce decimal as a subtype
of rational.
(2) SS fields denote the number of seconds. This can
either be an integer or a float.
(3) The date_time
structure can have a 7th field that
denotes the timezone offset in seconds as an
integer.
In addition, a ground object value is translated into a
properly typed RDF literal using rdf_canonical_literal/2.
There is a fine distinction in how duplicate statements are
handled in rdf/[3,4]: backtracking over rdf/3 will never return
duplicate triples that appear in multiple graphs. rdf/4 will
return such duplicate triples, because their graph term differs.
- Arguments:
-
S | - is the subject term. It is either a blank node or IRI. |
P | - is the predicate term. It is always an IRI. |
O | - is the object term. It is either a literal, a blank
node or IRI (except for true and false that denote the
values of datatype XSD boolean). |
G | - is the graph term. It is always an IRI. |
- See also
- - Triple pattern querying
- - xsd_number_string/2 and xsd_time_string/3 are used to
convert between lexical representations and Prolog terms.
- rdf_has(?S, +P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf_has(?S, +P, ?O, -RealP) is nondet
- Similar to rdf/3 and rdf/4, but P matches all predicates that
are defined as an rdfs:subPropertyOf of P. This predicate also
recognises the predicate properties
inverse_of
and
symmetric
. See rdf_set_predicate/2.
- rdf_update(+S, +P, +O, ++Action) is det
- rdf_update(+S, +P, +O, +G, ++Action) is det
- Replaces one of the three (four) fields on the matching triples
depending on Action:
- subject(Resource)
- Changes the first field of the triple.
- predicate(Resource)
- Changes the second field of the triple.
- object(Object)
- Changes the last field of the triple to the given resource or
literal(Value)
.
- graph(Graph)
- Moves the triple from its current named graph to Graph.
This only works with rdf_update/5 and throws an error when
used with rdf_update/4.
The argument matching Action must be ground. If this argument is
equivalent to the current value, no action is performed. Otherwise,
the requested action is performed on all matching triples. For
example, all resources typed rdfs:Class
can be changed to
owl:Class
using
?- rdf_update(_, rdf:type, rdfs:'Class',
object(owl:'Class')).
- Errors
- - instantiation_error if Action or the matching argument is
not ground.
- -
domain_error(rdf_update_action, Action)
if Action is not
one of the above terms.
- rdf_reachable(?S, +P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf_reachable(?S, +P, ?O, +MaxD, -D) is nondet
- True when O can be reached from S using the transitive closure
of P. The predicate uses (the internals of) rdf_has/3 and thus
matches both rdfs:subPropertyOf and the
inverse_of
and
symmetric
predicate properties. The version rdf_reachable/5
maximizes the steps considered and returns the number of steps
taken.
If both S and O are given, these predicates are semidet
. The
number of steps D is minimal because the implementation uses
breadth first search.
- rdf_assert(+S, +P, +O) is det
- rdf_assert(+S, +P, +O, +G) is det
- Assert a new triple. If O is a literal, certain Prolog terms are
translated to typed RDF literals. These conversions are
described with rdf_canonical_literal/2.
If a type is provided using Value^^Type syntax, additional
conversions are performed. All types accept either an atom or
Prolog string holding a valid RDF lexical value for the type and
xsd:float and xsd:double accept a Prolog integer.
- rdf_retractall(?S, ?P, ?O) is nondet
- rdf_retractall(?S, ?P, ?O, ?G) is nondet
- Remove all matching triples from the database. Matching is
performed using the same rules as rdf/3. The call does not
instantiate any of its arguments.
- {+Where} is semidet
- rdf_where(+Where) is semidet
- Formulate constraints on RDF terms, notably literals. These are
intended to be used as illustrated below. RDF constraints are
pure: they may be placed before, after or inside a graph pattern
and, provided the code contains no commit operations (!, ->),
the semantics of the goal remains the same. Preferably,
constraints are placed before the graph pattern as they often
help the RDF database to exploit its literal indexes. In the
example below, the database can choose between using the subject
and/or predicate hash or the ordered literal table.
{ Date >= "2000-01-01"^^xsd:date },
rdf(S, P, Date)
The following constraints are currently defined:
- (>),(>=),(==),(=<),(<)
- The comparison operators are defined between numbers (of any
recognised type), typed literals of the same type and
langStrings of the same language.
- prefix(String, Pattern)
- substring(String, Pattern)
- word(String, Pattern)
- like(String, Pattern)
- icase(String, Pattern)
- Text matching operators that act on both typed literals
and langStrings.
- lang_matches(Term, Pattern)
- Demands a full RDF term (Text@Lang) or a plain Lang term
to match the language pattern Pattern.
The predicates rdf_where/1 and {}/1 are identical. The
rdf_where/1 variant is provided to avoid ambiguity in
applications where {}/1 is used for other purposes. Note that it
is also possible to write rdf11:{...}
.
- rdf_default_graph(-Graph) is det
- rdf_default_graph(-Old, +New) is det
- Query/set the notion of the default graph. The notion of the
default graph is local to a thread. Threads created inherit the
default graph from their creator. See set_prolog_flag/2.
- rdf_nextto(?X, ?Y) is nondet
- rdf_nextto(?X, ?Y, ?RdfList) is nondet
- True if Y directly follows X in RdfList.
- rdf_nth0(?Index, +RDFList, ?X) is nondet
- rdf_nth1(?Index, +RDFList, ?X) is nondet
- True when X is the Index-th element (0-based or 1-based) of
RDFList. This predicate is deterministic if Index is given and
the list has no multiple rdf:first or rdf:rest values.
- rdf_assert_list(+PrologList, ?RDFList) is det
- rdf_assert_list(+PrologList, ?RDFList, +Graph) is det
- Create an RDF list from the given Prolog List. PrologList must
be a proper Prolog list and all members of the list must be
acceptable as object for rdf_assert/3. If RDFList is unbound and
PrologList is not empty, rdf_create_bnode/1 is used to create
RDFList.
- rdf_equal(?Resource1, ?Resource2)
- Simple equality test to exploit goal-expansion.
- lang_equal(+Lang1, +Lang2) is semidet
- True if two RFC language specifiers denote the same language
- See also
- - lang_matches/2.
- lang_matches(+Lang, +Pattern) is semidet
- True if Lang matches Pattern. This implements XML language
matching conform RFC 4647. Both Lang and Pattern are
dash-separated strings of identifiers or (for Pattern) the
wildcard *. Identifiers are matched case-insensitive and a *
matches any number of identifiers. A short pattern is the same
as *.
- rdf_resource(?Resource) is nondet
- True when Resource is a resource used as a subject or object in
a triple.
This predicate is primarily intended as a way to process all
resources without processing resources twice. The user must be
aware that some of the returned resources may not appear in any
visible triple.
- rdf_member_property(?Prop, ?Index)
- Deal with the rdf:_1, ... properties.
- rdf_source_location(+Subject, -Location) is nondet
- True when triples for Subject are loaded from Location.
- Arguments:
-
Location | - is a term File:Line. |
- rdf_gc is det
- Run the RDF-DB garbage collector until no garbage is left and all
tables are fully optimized. Under normal operation a separate thread
with identifier
__rdf_GC
performs garbage collection as long as
it is considered `useful'.
Using rdf_gc/0 should only be needed to ensure a fully clean
database for analysis purposes such as leak detection.
- rdf_statistics(?KeyValue) is nondet
- Obtain statistics on the RDF database. Defined statistics are:
- graphs(-Count)
- Number of named graphs.
- triples(-Count)
- Total number of triples in the database. This is the number
of asserted triples minus the number of retracted ones. The
number of visible triples in a particular context may be
different due to visibility rules defined by the logical
update view and transaction isolation.
- resources(-Count)
- Number of resources that appear as subject or object in a
triple. See rdf_resource/1.
- properties(-Count)
- Number of current predicates. See rdf_current_predicate/1.
- literals(-Count)
- Number of current literals. See rdf_current_literal/1.
- gc(GCCount, ReclaimedTriples, ReindexedTriples, Time)
- Information about the garbage collector.
- searched_nodes(-Count)
- Number of nodes expanded by rdf_reachable/3 and
rdf_reachable/5.
- lookup(rdf(S,P,O,G),Count)
- Number of queries that have been performed for this particular
instantiation pattern. Each of S,P,O,G is either + or -.
Fails in case the number of performed queries is zero.
- hash_quality(rdf(S,P,O,G),Buckets,Quality,PendingResize)
- Statistics on the index for this pattern. Indices are created
lazily on the first relevant query.
- triples_by_graph(Graph, Count)
- This statistics is produced for each named graph. See
triples
for the interpretation of this value.
- rdf_predicate_property(?Predicate, ?Property)
- Query properties of a defined predicate. Currently defined
properties are given below.
- symmetric(Bool)
- True if the predicate is defined to be symetric. I.e., {A} P
{B} implies {B} P {A}. Setting symmetric is equivalent to
inverse_of(Self)
.
- inverse_of(Inverse)
- True if this predicate is the inverse of Inverse. This
property is used by rdf_has/3, rdf_has/4, rdf_reachable/3 and
rdf_reachable/5.
- transitive(Bool)
- True if this predicate is transitive. This predicate is
currently not used. It might be used to make rdf_has/3 imply
rdf_reachable/3 for transitive predicates.
- triples(Triples)
- Unify Triples with the number of existing triples using this
predicate as second argument. Reporting the number of triples
is intended to support query optimization.
- rdf_subject_branch_factor(-Float)
- Unify Float with the average number of triples associated with
each unique value for the subject-side of this relation. If
there are no triples the value 0.0 is returned. This value is
cached with the predicate and recomputed only after
substantial changes to the triple set associated to this
relation. This property is intended for path optimalisation
when solving conjunctions of rdf/3 goals.
- rdf_object_branch_factor(-Float)
- Unify Float with the average number of triples associated with
each unique value for the object-side of this relation. In
addition to the comments with the
rdf_subject_branch_factor
property, uniqueness of the object value is computed from the
hash key rather than the actual values.
- rdfs_subject_branch_factor(-Float)
- Same as
rdf_subject_branch_factor
, but also considering
triples of `subPropertyOf' this relation. See also rdf_has/3.
- rdfs_object_branch_factor(-Float)
- Same as
rdf_object_branch_factor
, but also considering
triples of `subPropertyOf' this relation. See also rdf_has/3.
- See also
- - rdf_set_predicate/2.
- rdf_set_predicate(+Predicate, +Property) is det
- Define a property of the predicate. This predicate currently
supports the following properties:
- symmetric(+Boolean)
- Set/unset the predicate as being symmetric. Using
symmetric(true)
is the same as inverse_of(Predicate)
,
i.e., creating a predicate that is the inverse of
itself.
- transitive(+Boolean)
- Sets the transitive property.
- inverse_of(+Predicate2)
- Define Predicate as the inverse of Predicate2. An inverse
relation is deleted using
inverse_of([])
.
The transitive
property is currently not used. The symmetric
and inverse_of
properties are considered by rdf_has/3,4 and
rdf_reachable/3.
- To be done
- - Maintain these properties based on OWL triples.
- rdf_snapshot(-Snapshot) is det
- Take a snapshot of the current state of the RDF store. Later,
goals may be executed in the context of the database at this
moment using rdf_transaction/3 with the
snapshot
option. A
snapshot created outside a transaction exists until it is
deleted. Snapshots taken inside a transaction can only be used
inside this transaction.
- rdf_delete_snapshot(+Snapshot) is det
- Delete a snapshot as obtained from rdf_snapshot/1. After this
call, resources used for maintaining the snapshot become subject
to garbage collection.
- rdf_current_snapshot(?Term) is nondet
- True when Term is a currently known snapshot.
- bug
- - Enumeration of snapshots is slow.
- rdf_transaction(:Goal) is semidet
- Same as
rdf_transaction(Goal, user, [])
. See rdf_transaction/3.
- rdf_transaction(:Goal, +Id) is semidet
- Same as
rdf_transaction(Goal, Id, [])
. See rdf_transaction/3.
- rdf_transaction(:Goal, +Id, +Options) is semidet
- Run Goal in an RDF transaction. Compared to the ACID model,
RDF transactions have the following properties:
- Modifications inside the transactions become all atomically
visible to the outside world if Goal succeeds or remain
invisible if Goal fails or throws an exception. I.e.,
the atomicy property is fully supported.
- Consistency is not guaranteed. Later versions may
implement consistency constraints that will be checked
serialized just before the actual commit of a transaction.
- Concurrently executing transactions do not infuence each
other. I.e., the isolation property is fully supported.
- Durability can be activated by loading
library(semweb/rdf_persistency).
Processed options are:
- snapshot(+Snapshot)
- Execute Goal using the state of the RDF store as stored in
Snapshot. See rdf_snapshot/1. Snapshot can also be the
atom
true
, which implies that an anonymous snapshot is
created at the current state of the store. Modifications
due to executing Goal are only visible to Goal.
- rdf_active_transaction(?Id) is nondet
- True if Id is the identifier of a transaction in the context of
which this call is executed. If Id is not instantiated,
backtracking yields transaction identifiers starting with the
innermost nested transaction. Transaction identifier terms are
not copied, need not be ground and can be instantiated during
the transaction.
- rdf_monitor(:Goal, +Options)
- Call Goal if specified actions occur on the database.
- rdf_warm_indexes
- Warm all indexes. See rdf_warm_indexes/1.
- rdf_warm_indexes(+Indexes) is det
- Create the named indexes. Normally, the RDF database creates
indexes on lazily the first time they are needed. This predicate
serves two purposes: it provides an explicit way to make sure
that the required indexes are present and creating multiple
indexes at the same time is more efficient.
- rdf_update_duplicates is det
- Update the duplicate administration of the RDF store. This marks
every triple that is potentionally a duplicate of another as
duplicate. Being potentially a duplicate means that subject,
predicate and object are equivalent and the life-times of the
two triples overlap.
The duplicates marks are used to reduce the administrative load
of avoiding duplicate answers. Normally, the duplicates are
marked using a background thread that is started on the first
query that produces a substantial amount of duplicates.
- rdf_save_db(+File) is det
- rdf_save_db(+File, +Graph) is det
- Save triples into File in a quick-to-load binary format. If Graph
is supplied only triples flagged to originate from that database
are added. Files created this way can be loaded using
rdf_load_db/1.
- rdf_save_db(+File) is det
- rdf_save_db(+File, +Graph) is det
- Save triples into File in a quick-to-load binary format. If Graph
is supplied only triples flagged to originate from that database
are added. Files created this way can be loaded using
rdf_load_db/1.
- rdf_load_db(+File) is det
- Load triples from a file created using rdf_save_db/2.
- rdf_load(+FileOrList) is det
- Same as
rdf_load(FileOrList, [])
. See rdf_load/2.
- rdf_load(+FileOrList, :Options) is det
- Load RDF data. If this predicate is called a second time
for the same file, it is by default treated as a no-op.
See option =
if(changed)
=.
Options provides additional processing options.
Defined options are:
- blank_nodes(+ShareMode)
- How to handle equivalent blank nodes. If
share
(default),
equivalent blank nodes are shared in the same resource.
- base_uri(+URI)
- URI that is used for rdf:about="" and other RDF constructs
that are relative to the base uri. Default is the source
URL.
- concurrent(+Jobs)
- If FileOrList is a list of files, process the input files
using Jobs threads concurrently. Default is the mininum
of the number of cores and the number of inputs. Higher
values can be useful when loading inputs from (slow)
network connections. Using 1 (one) does not use
separate worker threads.
- format(+Format)
- Specify the source format explicitly. Normally this is
deduced from the filename extension or the mime-type. The
core library understands the formats xml (RDF/XML) and
triples (internal quick load and cache format). Plugins,
such as library(semweb/turtle) extend the set of recognised
extensions.
- graph(?Graph)
- Named graph in which to load the data. It is not allowed
to load two sources into the same named graph. If Graph is
unbound, it is unified to the graph into which the data is
loaded. The default graph is a
file://
URL when loading
a file or, if the specification is a URL, its normalized
version without the optional #fragment.
- if(Condition)
- When to load the file. One of
true
, changed
(default) or
not_loaded
.
- modified(-Modified)
- Unify Modified with one of
not_modified
, cached(File)
,
last_modified(Stamp)
or unknown
.
- cache(Bool)
- If
false
, do not use or create a cache file.
- register_namespaces(Bool)
- If
true
(default false
), register xmlns
namespace
declarations or Turtle @prefix
prefixes using
rdf_register_prefix/3 if there is no conflict.
- silent(+Bool)
- If
true
, the message reporting completion is printed using
level silent
. Otherwise the level is informational
. See
also print_message/2.
- prefixes(-Prefixes)
- Returns the prefixes defined in the source data file as a list
of pairs.
- multifile +Boolean
- Indicate that the addressed graph may be populated with
triples from multiple sources. This disables caching and
avoids that an rdf_load/2 call affecting the specified
graph cleans the graph.
Other options are forwarded to process_rdf/3. By default,
rdf_load/2 only loads RDF/XML from files. It can be extended to
load data from other formats and locations using plugins. The
full set of plugins relevant to support different formats and
locations is below:
:- use_module(library(semweb/turtle)). % Turtle and TriG
:- use_module(library(semweb/rdf_ntriples)).
:- use_module(library(semweb/rdf_zlib_plugin)).
:- use_module(library(semweb/rdf_http_plugin)).
:- use_module(library(http/http_ssl_plugin)).
- See also
- - rdf_open_hook/3, library(semweb/rdf_persistency) and
library(semweb/rdf_cache)
- rdf_unload(+Source) is det
- Identify the graph loaded from Source and use rdf_unload_graph/1
to erase this graph.
- deprecated
- - For compatibility, this predicate also accepts a
graph name instead of a source specification.
Please update your code to use
rdf_unload_graph/1.
- rdf_unload_graph(+Graph) is det
- Remove Graph from the RDF store. Succeeds silently if the named
graph does not exist.
- rdf_create_graph(+Graph) is det
- Create an RDF graph without triples. Succeeds silently if the
graph already exists.
- rdf_graph(?Graph) is nondet
- True when Graph is an existing graph.
- rdf_source(?Graph, ?SourceURL) is nondet
- True if named Graph is loaded from SourceURL.
- deprecated
- - Use
rdf_graph_property(Graph, source(SourceURL))
.
- rdf_source(?Source)
- True if Source is a loaded source.
- deprecated
- - Use rdf_graph/1 or rdf_source/2.
- rdf_make
- Reload all loaded files that have been modified since the last
time they were loaded.
- rdf_graph_property(?Graph, ?Property) is nondet
- True when Property is a property of Graph. Defined properties
are:
- hash(Hash)
- Hash is the (MD5-)hash for the content of Graph.
- modified(Boolean)
- True if the graph is modified since it was loaded or
rdf_set_graph/2 was called with
modified(false)
.
- source(Source)
- The graph is loaded from the Source (a URL)
- source_last_modified(?Time)
- Time is the last-modified timestamp of Source at the moment
the graph was loaded from Source.
- triples(Count)
- True when Count is the number of triples in Graph.
Additional graph properties can be added by defining rules for
the multifile predicate property_of_graph/2. Currently, the
following extensions are defined:
- rdf_set_graph(+Graph, +Property) is det
- Set properties of Graph. Defined properties are:
- modified(false)
- Set the modified state of Graph to false.
- rdf_reset_db
- Remove all triples from the RDF database and reset all its
statistics.
- bug
- - This predicate checks for active queries, but this check is
not properly synchronized and therefore the use of this
predicate is unsafe in multi-threaded contexts. It is
mainly used to run functionality tests that need to
start with an empty database.
- rdf_save(+Out) is det
- Same as
rdf_save(Out, [])
. See rdf_save/2 for details.
- rdf_save(+Out, :Options) is det
- Write RDF data as RDF/XML. Options is a list of one or more of
the following options:
- graph(+Graph)
- Save only triples associated to the given named Graph.
- anon(Bool)
- If
false
(default true
) do not save blank nodes that do
not appear (indirectly) as object of a named resource.
- base_uri(URI)
- BaseURI used. If present, all URIs that can be
represented relative to this base are written using
their shorthand. See also
write_xml_base
option.
- convert_typed_literal(:Convertor)
- Call Convertor(-Type, -Content, +RDFObject), providing
the opposite for the convert_typed_literal option of
the RDF parser.
- document_language(+Lang)
- Initial
xml:lang
saved with rdf:RDF element.
- encoding(Encoding)
- Encoding for the output. Either utf8 or iso_latin_1.
- inline(+Bool)
- If
true
(default false
), inline resources when
encountered for the first time. Normally, only bnodes
are handled this way.
- namespaces(+List)
- Explicitly specify saved namespace declarations. See
rdf_save_header/2 option namespaces for details.
- sorted(+Boolean)
- If
true
(default false
), emit subjects sorted on
the full URI. Useful to make file comparison easier.
- write_xml_base(Bool)
- If
false
, do not include the xml:base
declaration that is written normally when using the
base_uri
option.
- xml_attributes(+Bool)
- If
false
(default true
), never use xml attributes to
save plain literal attributes, i.e., always used an XML
element as in <name>Joe</name>
.
- Arguments:
-
Out | - Location to save the data. This can also be a
file-url (file://path ) or a stream wrapped
in a term stream(Out) . |
- See also
- - rdf_save_db/1
- rdf_save_header(+Fd, +Options)
- Save XML document header, doctype and open the RDF environment.
This predicate also sets up the namespace notation.
Save an RDF header, with the XML header, DOCTYPE, ENTITY and
opening the rdf:RDF element with appropriate namespace
declarations. It uses the primitives from section 3.5 to
generate the required namespaces and desired short-name. Options
is one of:
- graph(+URI)
- Only search for namespaces used in triples that belong to the
given named graph.
- namespaces(+List)
- Where List is a list of namespace abbreviations. With this
option, the expensive search for all namespaces that may be
used by your data is omitted. The namespaces
rdf
and rdfs
are added to the provided List. If a namespace is not
declared, the resource is emitted in non-abreviated form.
- rdf_graph_prefixes(?Graph, -List:ord_set) is det
- rdf_graph_prefixes(?Graph, -List:ord_set, :Options) is det
- List is a sorted list of prefixes (namepaces) in Graph. Options
defined are:
- filter(:Filter)
- optional Filter argument is used to filter the results. It
is called with 3 additional arguments:
call(Filter, Where, Prefix, URI)
The Where argument gives the location of the prefix ans is
one of subject
, predicate
, object
or type
. The
Prefix argument is the potentionally new prefix and URI is
the full URI that is being processed.
- expand(:Goal)
- Hook to generate the graph. Called using
call(Goal,S,P,O,Graph)
- min_count(+Count)
- Only include prefixes that appear at least N times. Default
is 1. Declared prefixes are always returned if found at
least one time.
- get_prefix(:GetPrefix)
- Predicate to extract the candidate prefix from an IRI. Default
is iri_xml_namespace/2.
- rdf_graph_prefixes(?Graph, -List:ord_set) is det
- rdf_graph_prefixes(?Graph, -List:ord_set, :Options) is det
- List is a sorted list of prefixes (namepaces) in Graph. Options
defined are:
- filter(:Filter)
- optional Filter argument is used to filter the results. It
is called with 3 additional arguments:
call(Filter, Where, Prefix, URI)
The Where argument gives the location of the prefix ans is
one of subject
, predicate
, object
or type
. The
Prefix argument is the potentionally new prefix and URI is
the full URI that is being processed.
- expand(:Goal)
- Hook to generate the graph. Called using
call(Goal,S,P,O,Graph)
- min_count(+Count)
- Only include prefixes that appear at least N times. Default
is 1. Declared prefixes are always returned if found at
least one time.
- get_prefix(:GetPrefix)
- Predicate to extract the candidate prefix from an IRI. Default
is iri_xml_namespace/2.
- rdf_save_footer(Out:stream) is det
- Finish XML generation and write the document footer.
- See also
- - rdf_save_header/2, rdf_save_subject/3.
- rdf_save_subject(+Out, +Subject:resource, +Options) is det
- Save the triples associated to Subject to Out. Options:
- graph(+Graph)
- Only save properties from Graph.
- base_uri(+URI)
- convert_typed_literal(:Goal)
- document_language(+XMLLang)
- See also
- - rdf_save/2 for a description of these options.
- rdf_match_label(+How, +Pattern, +Label) is semidet
- True if Label matches Pattern according to How. How is one of
icase
, substring
, word
, prefix
or like
. For backward
compatibility, exact
is a synonym for icase
.
- rdf_split_url(+Prefix, +Local, -URL) is det
- rdf_split_url(-Prefix, -Local, +URL) is det
- Split/join a URL. This functionality is moved to library(sgml).
- deprecated
- - Use iri_xml_namespace/3. Note that the argument
order is
iri_xml_namespace(+IRI, -Namespace, -Localname)
.
- rdf_url_namespace(+URL, -Namespace)
- Namespace is the namespace of URL.
- deprecated
- - Use iri_xml_namespace/2
- rdf_new_literal_map(-Map) is det
- Create a new literal map, returning an opaque handle.
- rdf_destroy_literal_map(+Map) is det
- Destroy a literal map. After this call, further use of the Map
handle is illegal. Additional synchronisation is needed if maps
that are shared between threads are destroyed to guarantee the
handle is no longer used. In some scenarios
rdf_reset_literal_map/1 provides a safe alternative.
- rdf_reset_literal_map(+Map) is det
- Delete all content from the literal map.
- rdf_insert_literal_map(+Map, +Key, +Value) is det
- Add a relation between Key and Value to the map. If this
relation already exists no action is performed.
- rdf_insert_literal_map(+Map, +Key, +Value, -KeyCount) is det
- As rdf_insert_literal_map/3. In addition, if Key is a new key in
Map, unify KeyCount with the number of keys in Map. This serves
two purposes. Derived maps, such as the stem and metaphone maps
need to know about new keys and it avoids additional foreign
calls for doing the progress in rdf_litindex.pl.
- rdf_delete_literal_map(+Map, +Key) is det
- Delete Key and all associated values from the map.
- rdf_delete_literal_map(+Map, +Key, +Value) is det
- Delete the association between Key and Value from the map.
- rdf_find_literal_map(+Map, +KeyList, -ValueList) is det
- Unify ValueList with an ordered set of values associated to all
keys from KeyList. Each key in KeyList is either an atom, an
integer or a term
not(Key)
. If not-terms are provided, there
must be at least one positive keywords. The negations are tested
after establishing the positive matches.
- rdf_keys_in_literal_map(+Map, +Spec, -Answer) is det
- Realises various queries on the key-set:
- all
Unify Answer with an ordered list of all keys.
key(+Key)
Succeeds if Key is a key in the map and unify Answer with the
number of values associated with the key. This provides a fast
test of existence without fetching the possibly large
associated value set as with rdf_find_literal_map/3.
prefix(+Prefix)
Unify Answer with an ordered set of all keys that have the
given prefix. See section 3.1 for details on prefix matching.
Prefix must be an atom. This call is intended for
auto-completion in user interfaces.
ge(+Min)
Unify Answer with all keys that are larger or equal to the
integer Min.
le(+Max)
Unify Answer with all keys that are smaller or equal to the integer
Max.
between(+Min, +Max)
Unify
Answer with all keys between Min and Max (including).
- rdf_statistics_literal_map(+Map, -KeyValue)
- Query some statistics of the map. Provides KeyValue are:
- size(-Keys, -Relations)
- Unify Keys with the total key-count of the index and Relation
with the total Key-Value count.
- rdf_version(-Version) is det
- True when Version is the numerical version-id of this library.
The version is computed as
Major*10000 + Minor*100 + Patch.
- rdf_set(+Term) is det
- Set properties of the RDF store. Currently defines:
- hash(+Hash, +Parameter, +Value)
- Set properties for a triple index. Hash is one of
s
,
p
, sp
, o
, po
, spo
, g
, sg
or pg
. Parameter
is one of:
- size
- Value defines the number of entries in the hash-table.
Value is rounded down to a power of 2. After setting
the size explicitly, auto-sizing for this table is
disabled. Setting the size smaller than the current
size results in a
permission_error
exception.
- average_chain_len
- Set maximum average collision number for the hash.
- optimize_threshold
- Related to resizing hash-tables. If 0, all triples are
moved to the new size by the garbage collector. If more
then zero, those of the last Value resize steps remain at
their current location. Leaving cells at their current
location reduces memory fragmentation and slows down
access.
- rdf_md5(+Graph, -MD5) is det
- True when MD5 is the MD5 hash for all triples in graph. The MD5
digest itself is represented as an atom holding a 32-character
hexadecimal string. The library maintains the digest
incrementally on rdf_load/[1,2], rdf_load_db/1, rdf_assert/[3,4]
and rdf_retractall/[3,4]. Checking whether the digest has
changed since the last rdf_load/[1,2] call provides a practical
means for checking whether the file needs to be saved.
- deprecated
- - New code should use
rdf_graph_property(Graph,
hash(Hash))
.
- rdf_generation(-Generation) is det
- True when Generation is the current generation of the database.
Each modification to the database increments the generation. It
can be used to check the validity of cached results deduced from
the database. Committing a non-empty transaction increments the
generation by one.
When inside a transaction, Generation is unified to a term
TransactionStartGen + InsideTransactionGen. E.g., 4+3 means
that the transaction was started at generation 4 of the global
database and we have created 3 new generations inside the
transaction. Note that this choice of representation allows for
comparing generations using Prolog arithmetic. Comparing a
generation in one transaction with a generation in another
transaction is meaningless.
- rdf_debug(+Level) is det
- Set debugging to Level. Level is an integer 0..9. Default is
0 no debugging.
- rdf_atom_md5(+Text, +Times, -MD5) is det
- Computes the MD5 hash from Text, which is an atom, string or list of
character codes. Times is an integer >= 1. When > 0, the MD5
algorithm is repeated Times times on the generated hash. This can be
used for password encryption algorithms to make generate-and-test
loops slow.
- deprecated
- - Obviously, password hash primitives do not belong in
this library. The library(crypto) from the \const{ssl} package
provides extensive support for hashes. The \const{clib} package
provides library(crypt) to access the OS (Unix) password hash
implementation as well as lightweight implementations of several
popular hashes.
- rdf_current_prefix(:Alias, ?URI) is nondet
- Query predefined prefixes and prefixes defined with
rdf_register_prefix/2 and local prefixes defined with
rdf_prefix/2. If Alias is unbound and one URI is the prefix of
another, the longest is returned first. This allows turning a
resource into a prefix/local couple using the simple enumeration
below. See rdf_global_id/2.
rdf_current_prefix(Prefix, Expansion),
atom_concat(Expansion, Local, URI),
- rdf_prefix(:Alias, +URI) is det
- Register a local prefix. This declaration takes precedence
over globally defined prefixes using rdf_register_prefix/2,3.
Module local prefixes are notably required to deal with SWISH,
where users need to be able to have independent namespace
declarations.
- rdf_register_prefix(+Prefix, +URI) is det
- rdf_register_prefix(+Prefix, +URI, +Options) is det
- Register Prefix as an abbreviation for URI. Options:
- force(Boolean)
- If
true
, replace existing namespace alias. Please note
that replacing a namespace is dangerous as namespaces
affect preprocessing. Make sure all code that depends on
a namespace is compiled after changing the registration.
- keep(Boolean)
- If
true
and Alias is already defined, keep the
original binding for Prefix and succeed silently.
Without options, an attempt to redefine an alias raises a
permission error.
Predefined prefixes are:
- rdf_register_prefix(+Prefix, +URI) is det
- rdf_register_prefix(+Prefix, +URI, +Options) is det
- Register Prefix as an abbreviation for URI. Options:
- force(Boolean)
- If
true
, replace existing namespace alias. Please note
that replacing a namespace is dangerous as namespaces
affect preprocessing. Make sure all code that depends on
a namespace is compiled after changing the registration.
- keep(Boolean)
- If
true
and Alias is already defined, keep the
original binding for Prefix and succeed silently.
Without options, an attempt to redefine an alias raises a
permission error.
Predefined prefixes are:
- rdf_unregister_prefix(+Alias) is det
- Delete a prefix global registration.
- rdf_current_ns(:Prefix, ?URI) is nondet
-
- deprecated
- - Use rdf_current_prefix/2.
- rdf_register_ns(:Prefix, ?URI) is det
- rdf_register_ns(:Prefix, ?URI, +Options) is det
- Register an RDF prefix.
- deprecated
- - Use rdf_register_prefix/2 or rdf_register_prefix/3.
- rdf_register_ns(:Prefix, ?URI) is det
- rdf_register_ns(:Prefix, ?URI, +Options) is det
- Register an RDF prefix.
- deprecated
- - Use rdf_register_prefix/2 or rdf_register_prefix/3.
- rdf_global_id(?IRISpec, :IRI) is semidet
- Convert between Prefix:Local and full IRI (an atom). If IRISpec is
an atom, it is simply unified with IRI. This predicate fails
silently if IRI is an RDF literal.
Note that this predicate is a meta-predicate on its output argument.
This is necessary to get the module context while the first argument
may be of the form (:)/2. The above mode description is correct, but
should be interpreted as (?,?).
- Errors
- -
existence_error(rdf_prefix, Prefix)
- See also
- - rdf_equal/2 provides a compile time alternative
- - The rdf_meta/1 directive asks for compile time expansion
of arguments.
- bug
- - Error handling is incomplete. In its current implementation
the same code is used for compile-time expansion and to
facilitate runtime conversion and checking. These use cases
have different requirements.
- rdf_global_object(+Object, :GlobalObject) is semidet
- rdf_global_object(-Object, :GlobalObject) is semidet
- Same as rdf_global_id/2, but intended for dealing with the
object part of a triple, in particular the type for typed
literals. Note that the predicate is a meta-predicate on the
output argument. This is necessary to get the module context
while the first argument may be of the form (:)/2.
- Errors
- -
existence_error(rdf_prefix, Prefix)
- rdf_global_term(+TermIn, :GlobalTerm) is det
- Performs rdf_global_id/2 on predixed IRIs and rdf_global_object/2 on
RDF literals, by recursively analysing the term. Note that the
predicate is a meta-predicate on the output argument. This is
necessary to get the module context while the first argument may be
of the form (:)/2.
Terms of the form Prefix:Local
that appear in TermIn for which
Prefix is not defined are not replaced. Unlike rdf_global_id/2 and
rdf_global_object/2, no error is raised.
- rdf_meta(+Heads)
- This directive defines the argument types of the named
predicates, which will force compile time namespace expansion
for these predicates. Heads is a coma-separated list of callable
terms. Defined argument properties are:
- :
-
Argument is a goal. The goal is processed using expand_goal/2,
recursively applying goal transformation on the argument.
- +
-
The argument is instantiated at entry. Nothing is changed.
- -
-
The argument is not instantiated at entry. Nothing is changed.
- ?
-
The argument is unbound or instantiated at entry. Nothing is
changed.
- @
-
The argument is not changed.
- r
-
The argument must be a resource. If it is a term
prefix:local it is translated.
- o
-
The argument is an object or resource. See
rdf_global_object/2.
- t
-
The argument is a term that must be translated. Expansion will
translate all occurences of prefix:local appearing
anywhere in the term. See rdf_global_term/2.
As it is subject to term_expansion/2, the rdf_meta/1 declaration
can only be used as a directive. The directive must be processed
before the definition of the predicates as well as before
compiling code that uses the rdf meta-predicates. The atom
rdf_meta
is declared as an operator exported from
library(semweb/rdf_db). Files using rdf_meta/1 must explicitely
load this library.
Beginning with SWI-Prolog 7.3.17, the low-level RDF interface
(rdf/3, rdf_assert/3, etc.) perform runtime expansion of
Prefix:Local
terms. This eliminates the need for rdf_meta/1
for simple cases. However, runtime expansion comes at a
significant overhead and having two representations for IRIs (a
plain atom and a term Prefix:Local
) implies that simple
operations such as comparison of IRIs no longer map to native
Prolog operations such as IRI1 == IRI2
.