SELECT DISTINCT ?type
WHERE { ?x rdf:type ?type . }
SELECT DISTINCT ?p
WHERE { ?s ?p ?o . }
then
SELECT ?s
WHERE {
?s a <http://uri_of_a_type>
} LIMIT 100
and then
DESCRIBE <http://uri_of_an_instance>
or
SELECT ?p ?o
WHERE {
<http://uri_of_an_instance> ?p ?o .
}
Having some statistics on the types may help too :
SELECT ?type (COUNT(?instance) AS ?count)
WHERE {
?instance a ?type .
} GROUP BY ?type
2015-01-22 15:19 GMT+01:00 Luca Matteis <lmatteis@gmail.com>:
> "Give me all your types" seems the most sensible thing to do.
> Otherwise full text search.
>
> On Thu, Jan 22, 2015 at 3:09 PM, Juan Sequeda <juanfederico@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> > Assume you are given a URL for a SPARQL endpoint. You have no idea what
> data
> > is being exposed.
> >
> > What do you do to explore that endpoint? What queries do you write?
> >
> > Juan Sequeda
> > +1-575-SEQ-UEDA
> > www.juansequeda.com
>
>
--
*Thomas Francart* - Sparna
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