- From: Alfredo Serafini <seralf@gmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 21 Feb 2014 11:26:35 +0100
- To: Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>
- Cc: Markus Lanthaler <markus.lanthaler@gmx.net>, Linked JSON <public-linked-json@w3.org>, "public-csv-wg@w3.org" <public-csv-wg@w3.org>, public-csv-wg-comments@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CADawF4Ooh=G8KBYM7mSmn3kq2o-kYhtRcnch9ZMbOVr2T7Ff+w@mail.gmail.com>
Hi please consider that R2RML is also shaped on SQL: mapping "directly" CSV to RDF would probably relies more on combining a syntactic mapping to the linking capabilities of RDF. I think a similar goal can be obtained by json-ld, as one user could ideally convert from CSV to json, thinking "only" about constructing the correct match for columns, and than obtain an almost "implicit" RDF: there could be no need for explicit joins. 2014-02-21 11:17 GMT+01:00 Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>: > > > Markus Lanthaler wrote: > > +CC public-csv-wg(-comments) > > > > > > On Friday, February 21, 2014 6:33 AM, David Booth wrote: > >> Personally, I would prefer not to overload JSON-LD this way. This > >> essentially amounts to a transformation rule. And although > >> transformation rules are useful and neede, I would prefer to have them > >> specified as a separate layer. > > > > I've raised an issue regarding IRI templates 2 years ago [1] and we > > concluded back then to "not add any normative language relating to IRI > > templates or other transformations". > > > > As is, framing is not really suitable for this as it expects the input to > > already be valid JSON-LD. I think what you want is a generic mechanism to > > map CSV to RDF. You can then easily serialize it (and frame it) in > JSON-LD. > > > > I haven't followed the work in the CSV WG at all till now but it appears > to > > me that there exists already an (almost complete) solution that you could > > leverage: R2RML [2] (I'm sure this has already been discussed). If you > add a > > way to reference a JSON-LD context or frame, you are quite close to what > you > > want to achieve I think: > > CSV -> RDF -> JSON-LD > > Just to reflect on this: the current thinking was actually the opposite > (but we > are still early in the process). Indeed, there is a need for a CSV->JSON > transformation, too, for users who simply want to use the data directly, > without > going through RDF. Defining that JSON mapping by, essentially, defining a > CSV->JSON-LD mapping, and relying on a separate @context to yield RDF if > necessary seems to be an attractive proposition... > > Ivan > > > > > > > > Cheers, > > Markus > > > > > > [1] https://github.com/json-ld/json-ld.org/issues/108 > > [2] http://www.w3.org/TR/2012/REC-r2rml-20120927/ > > > > > > > > -- > > Markus Lanthaler > > @markuslanthaler > > > > > > > >> On 02/20/2014 08:50 PM, Gregg Kellogg wrote: > >>> As part of work on the CSV WG, I've put forward the concept of CSV-LD > >>> [1]. As I've discussed before, the idea is to use something like a > >>> JSON-LD frame to map column values in a CSV to turn it into JSON-LD. > >>> > >>> I discussed the idea of IRI Templates (really @id templates) on the > >>> mailing list [2]. The idea is that fields in a CSV may be used to > >>> identify entities, but they may not explicitly include an identifier. > >>> In some cases, it may take two columns to determine a unique > >>> identifier, for example when a database dump has a composite primary > >>> key. > >>> > >>> The idea I had is that one or more column values might be used to > >>> create a template for an IRI or Blank Node. This concept might be > >>> more generally useful for JSON-LD framing, but I wanted to get some > >>> reaction from this list. From the email: > >>> > >>> [[[ I've been hand-waving around this, but one way to do this might > >>> be to extend the context definition to describe identifier > >>> templates: > >>> > >>> { "region_id": {"@id": "_:{Sales Region}", "@type": "@idTemplate"} } > >>> > >>> I'm sure we can do much better, but the basic idea is that column > >>> values can be used within a template used to construct an IRI or > >>> BNode identifier, using some suitable rules. We could then use > >>> "region_id" in the frame, with the understanding that it will be > >>> expanded using the template defined in the context. > >>> > >>> { "@id": "region_id", "@type": "ex:SalesRegion", "Sales Region": > >>> null, "ex:period": { "@type": "ex:SalesPeriod", "Quarter": null, > >>> "Sales": null } } ]]] > >>> > >>> The idea would be that if a term is of type @idTemplate, it could be > >>> used as a key or value (in this case, the value of @id), and it would > >>> be processed based on other properties of the associated node ("Sales > >>> Region" here). Obviously, this would require some normalization as > >>> well, so that the result would be legal. A more complete example > >>> would be the following: > >>> > >>> { "@context": { "dc": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/", "rdf": > >>> "http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#", "ex": > >>> "http://example/", "Sales Region": "dc:title", "Quarter": > >>> "dc:title", "Sales": "rdf:value", "region_id": {"@id": "_:{Sales > >>> Region}", "@type": "@idTemplate"} }, "@id": "region_id", "Sales > >>> Region": null, "ex:period": { "Quarter": null, "Sales": null } } > >>> > >>> I suppose that filling in the template term would be part of > >>> compaction, and the @idTemplate would allow such a term to be used as > >>> the value of @id. This could presumably be done in a CSV-LD spec, but > >>> it might be more generally useful as part of JSON-LD Framing. > >>> > >>> Thoughts? > >>> > >>> Gregg Kellogg gregg@greggkellogg.net > >>> > >>> [1] https://www.w3.org/2013/csvw/wiki/CSV-LD [2] > >>> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-csv-wg/2014Feb/0119.html > >>> > >>> > >>> > > > > > >
Received on Friday, 21 February 2014 10:27:03 UTC