- From: Markus Lanthaler <markus.lanthaler@gmx.net>
- Date: Mon, 10 Aug 2015 22:06:24 +0200
- To: "'Hydra'" <public-hydra@w3.org>
- Cc: <public-data-shapes-wg@w3.org>, "'Holger Knublauch'" <holger@topquadrant.com>
+ public-data-shapes-wg@w3.org (this time with the right address) On 3 Aug 2015 at 05:59, Holger Knublauch wrote: > Dear Hydra group members, Hi Holger, Sorry for the late reply. The fantastic weather makes it very hard to do some work besides the necessary day-to-day work :-) It's probably a bit easier in your hemisphere at this time of the year. > I would like to draw your attention to the RDF Data Shapes Working Group > [1] which has made some progress towards defining the Shapes Constraint > Language (SHACL) [2]. For a quick tutorial, see [3]. Great to see that you already implemented it. > While the language is not yet complete and far from being officially > standardized, I believe most major design decisions have been made and > the syntax is now reasonably stable. OK. What are the major missing parts? I tried to keep up with the discussions on the mailing list but the volume of mails has been way too high. I had a quick look at the current draft. I was kind of surprised by the few constraints it defines. Is this something that still will be addressed? > We had previous discussions here why there could be some good synergies > between SHACL and Hydra (and Linked Data Fragments). Among others, SHACL > shapes could serve as structural definitions of web service input and > output. There are two aspects where the SHACL group could need input and > possibly contributions: > > 1) SHACL should have a standard JSON-LD Context. While I do understand > JSON-LD, I believe someone with more JSON-LD experience could do a much > better job in defining a standard @context file to make shape > definitions as readable as possible - before everyone invents their own > variation of this. I can certainly help with that. > 2) SHACL can interact with JavaScript! The WG has decided that > structural constraints (and template macros etc) can be defined in any > number of execution languages. SHACL comes built-in with SPARQL, but we > explicitly leave the door open for JavaScript-based execution; either in > conjunction with SPARQL or without SPARQL and even without any RDF at > all. One example syntax had been outlined in [4]: > > ex:MyShape > sh:constraint [ > sh:message "The URL {?value} cannot be resolved for {?predicate}" ; > sh:predicate ex:imageURL ; > sh:jsExpression "helper.isResolvableMedia(value)" ; > sh:jsLibrary "http://example.org/helper.js" ; > ] . > > (Imagine a corresponding JSON-LD syntax if item 1 is solved). The above > would mean that a constraint violation is reported if the given > jsExpression evaluates to false. Maybe it could be of interest to people > here at Hydra to have a standard vocabulary to communicate such > constraints to clients (or node.js servers). This is certainly nice but I think those extension points should be just that.. extension points. In most cases users shouldn't need to use them but just choose from a set of predefined constraints. If the set of predefined constraints isn't compelling enough, I'd expect SHACL to be a quite tough sell. > While I am not officially speaking on behalf of the WG, I believe the > group would welcome any volunteer who would like to work on a JavaScript > extension document for SHACL, possibly as a separate WG deliverable in > addition to the SPARQL stuff. A chance to get your name on a W3C > publication. I am confident that such a JavaScript binding will evolve > sooner or later anyway, but it would be a much stronger story for SHACL > if it had these two language bindings from day 1. > > Regards > Holger > > [1] https://www.w3.org/2014/data-shapes/wiki/Main_Page > [2] http://w3c.github.io/data-shapes/shacl/ > [3] http://www.topquadrant.com/technology/shacl/tutorial/ > [4] > https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-data-shapes-wg/2015May/0216.html
Received on Monday, 10 August 2015 20:06:56 UTC