- From: Ryan Kohl <ryanckohl@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 18 May 2011 22:27:35 -0400
- To: Alan Ruttenberg <alanruttenberg@gmail.com>
- Cc: "alexpi@gmail.com" <alexpi@gmail.com>, Marco Neumann <marco.neumann@gmail.com>, Michael F Uschold <uschold@gmail.com>, glenn mcdonald <glenn@furia.com>, Martin Hepp <martin.hepp@ebusiness-unibw.org>, "semantic-web@w3.org" <semantic-web@w3.org>, "public-lod@w3.org" <public-lod@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <BANLkTi=-Yu7UsGPaXxPArB9wHbkT6EdEZw@mail.gmail.com>
Queries as resources isn't a shabby idea. If the tooling is awesome, then meaningless T-Box URIs can be an awesome idea for interoperability (I've no problem at all with meaningless A-Box URIs, and quite prefer them). That said, I'd prefer to try the tooling before I changed the data representation, though. Otherwise, it'd be difficult to use something like rrdf <https://github.com/egonw/rrdf> if the URIs in the T-Box were meaningless - I haven't yet seen anything on the CRAN<http://cran.r-project.org/> to write queries in the way you're talking about. -Ryan On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 9:08 PM, Alan Ruttenberg <alanruttenberg@gmail.com>wrote: > On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 8:38 PM, Ryan Kohl <ryanckohl@gmail.com> wrote: > > Why stop there - why not posit a rewrite of the RDF, RDFS, and OWL > > vocabularies according to this naming protocol: > > I would if I had control. Where I have control I am - there will be a > new version of RO, for example, that does this. > > > @prefix ro: <http://www.obofoundry.org/ro/ro.owl#> . > > @prefix obo: <http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/> . > > obo:IAO_0000104 rdf:IAB00001239 owl:IAC00008872; > > rdfs:IAB000012887 > > [ rdf:IAB00001239 owl:IAC00002341; > > owl:IAC00000042 ro:BBR11774423; > > owl:IAC10101010 obo:IAO_00000005 ]. > > I can see how this would help ontology efforts aimed at tagging efforts. > > ? > > > But for situations where A-BOX querying is central (like most linked data > > scenarios), these meaningless URIs just get in the way. > > In the OBO id policy document I've listed what I consider gets in the > way of using meaningful ids. I see exactly two problems with using > "meaningless" ids, both of which I consider to be symptoms of > short-sightedness or lack of imagination or lack of appreciation of > computer science. > > 1) SPARQL has to be written in terms of ids only. Why isn't there the > ability to import modules? Why isn't there a simple macro system? > 2) People want to write machine-directed messages in text editors. > > There has been much done in computer science to manage abstraction and > modularity, none of which has been applied in the SPARQL spec. As far > as (2) goes, I don't see many people writing postscript in text > editors, yet somehow postscript is a successful language. What should > we learn from this? > > > > Remember that many > > linked data scenarios will find sparql queries embedded in Java, Python, > and > > C++ code. It seems a bit much to expect a query writer/developer to > > maintain literally unreadable source code. > > Absolutely. And a little bit of education and mentoring in good > software development practices would go a long way in making this not > happen. There's no reason why SPARQL (or SQL) should be embedded in > computer code. Query text should be considered a resource, in the same > way that savvy developers consider natural language strings a resource > (and thus enable easy internationalization). > > Have a look at > http://obi.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/obi/trunk/src/tools/build/external-templates.txt?revision=3210&view=markup > > This is how we manage SPARQL in OBI. It lives in a separate file as > template and is interpreted by a program, which does substitution. > Think ".h" files, or css versus html versus javascript. > > -Alan > > > > > On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 7:26 PM, Alan Ruttenberg < > alanruttenberg@gmail.com> > > wrote: > >> > >> @prefix ro: <http://www.obofoundry.org/ro/ro.owl#> . > >> @prefix obo: <http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/> . > >> > >> obo:IAO_0000104 rdf:type owl:Class ; > >> rdfs:subClassOf > >> [ rdf:type owl:Restriction ; > >> owl:onProperty ro:has_part ; > >> owl:someValuesFrom obo:IAO_0000005 > >> ] . > >> > >> If you can't figure out what this means, ask your favorite LOD browser > >> for help, or build a better one. > >> > >> -Alan > >> > >> On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 6:49 PM, alexpi@gmail.com <alexpi@gmail.com> > >> wrote: > >> > > >> > za ssw m > >> > Sent from my LG phone > >> > > >> > Marco Neumann <marco.neumann@gmail.com> wrote: > >> > > >> > >Michael, > >> > > > >> > >indeed I did not not read Alan's email. I assume he refers to A-Box > >> > >identifiers only. > >> > > > >> > >On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 4:31 PM, Michael F Uschold > >> > > <uschold@gmail.com>wrote: > >> > > > >> > >> On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 1:26 PM, Marco Neumann > >> > >> <marco.neumann@gmail.com>wrote: > >> > >> > >> > >>> Glenn, > >> > >>> > >> > >>> it's not feasible, nor enforceable, nor desirable to develop > >> > >>> ontologies > >> > >>> entirely with random URIs as identifiers. > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> *Perhaps you have not seen Alan Ruttenberg's email on this topic. I > >> > >> think > >> > >> they do exactly this. It was no free lunch, they had a lot of work > >> > >> to do to > >> > >> make this doable -- in large part because as Glenn says, the > duality > >> > >> of: > >> > >> "machines need to think in ids and people need to think in names" > is > >> > >> not > >> > >> well supported by tools or methodology.* > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >>> I am of the opinion that local names should indeed be designed > with > >> > >>> meaningful names in mind last but not least to improve the > ontology > >> > >>> engineering process. Though that said there might be exceptions > such > >> > >>> as NLP > >> > >>> and ML where automatic tagging and ontology creation with random > >> > >>> URIs can > >> > >>> useful, but that's a special use case. > >> > >>> > >> > >>> Marco > >> > >>> > >> > >>> > >> > >>> On Wed, May 18, 2011 at 3:55 PM, glenn mcdonald <glenn@furia.com> > >> > >>> wrote: > >> > >>> > >> > >>>> I agree wholeheartedly that URIs should be pure identifiers, with > >> > >>>> no > >> > >>>> embedded semantics or assumptions of readability. And I agree > with > >> > >>>> Kingsley > >> > >>>> that there's an elephant in the room. I might even agree with > >> > >>>> Kingsley about > >> > >>>> what the elephant is. > >> > >>>> > >> > >>>> But to say it from my point of view: machines need to think in > ids, > >> > >>>> people need to think in names. The RDF/SPARQL "stack", such as it > >> > >>>> is, has > >> > >>>> not internalized the implications of this duality, and thus isn't > >> > >>>> really > >> > >>>> prepared to support both audiences properly. Almost all the > >> > >>>> canonical > >> > >>>> examples of RDF and SPARQL avoid this issue by using toy > use-cases > >> > >>>> with > >> > >>>> semi-human-readable URIs, and/or with literals where there ought > to > >> > >>>> be > >> > >>>> nodes. If you try to do a non-trivial dataset the right way, > you'll > >> > >>>> immediately find that writing the RDF or the SPARQL by hand is > >> > >>>> basically > >> > >>>> intractable. If you try to produce an human-intelligible > >> > >>>> user-interface to > >> > >>>> such data, you'll find yourself clinging to rdfs:label for dear > >> > >>>> life, and > >> > >>>> then falling, falling, falling... > >> > >>>> > >> > >>>> In fact, there's almost nothing more telling than the fact that > >> > >>>> rdfs:label is rdfS! This is in some ways the most fundamental > >> > >>>> aspect of > >> > >>>> human/computer data-interaction, and RDF itself has essentially > >> > >>>> nothing to > >> > >>>> say about it. > >> > >>>> > >> > >>> > >> > >>> > >> > >>> > >> > >>> -- > >> > >>> Marco Neumann > >> > >>> KONA > >> > >>> > >> > >>> Make sure to join us at the Semantic Technology Conference 2011 in > >> > >>> San > >> > >>> Francisco and save 15% with the coupon code STMN > >> > >>> http://www.lotico.com/evt/stc2011/ > >> > >>> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> -- > >> > >> Michael Uschold, PhD > >> > >> Senior Ontology Consultant, Semantic Arts > >> > >> LinkedIn: http://tr.im/limfu > >> > >> Skype, Twitter: UscholdM > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > > > >> > > > >> > >-- > >> > >Marco Neumann > >> > >KONA > >> > > > >> > >Make sure to join us at the Semantic Technology Conference 2011 in > San > >> > >Francisco and save 15% with the coupon code STMN > >> > >http://www.lotico.com/evt/stc2011/ > > > > >
Received on Friday, 20 May 2011 06:56:46 UTC