- From: Gregg Kellogg <gregg@greggkellogg.com>
- Date: Tue, 30 Dec 2014 19:32:49 -0800
- To: Ruben Verborgh <ruben.verborgh@ugent.be>
- Cc: Gregg Kellogg <gregg@greggkellogg.net>, "public-rdf-comments@w3.org" <public-rdf-comments@w3.org>, Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>
Congratulations Ruben! I'll regenerate the reports and see about getting them updated in the repository. Gregg Kellogg Sent from my iPhone > On Dec 30, 2014, at 3:46 PM, Ruben Verborgh <ruben.verborgh@ugent.be> wrote: > > Hi Gregg, Ivan, > > I appreciate your help, and sorry for nitpicking; > one needs to get very picky about details > when aiming to pass all test cases of a spec ;-) > > That said, I have one existing and three new EARL reports for N3.js: > - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/RubenVerborgh/N3.js/earl/n3js-earl-report-turtle.ttl (existing) > - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/RubenVerborgh/N3.js/earl/n3js-earl-report-trig.ttl (new) > - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/RubenVerborgh/N3.js/earl/n3js-earl-report-ntriples.ttl (new) > - https://raw.githubusercontent.com/RubenVerborgh/N3.js/earl/n3js-earl-report-nquads.ttl (new) > As far as I know, this makes N3.js the first JavaScript library to parse TriG and N-Quads > (and certainly the only one doing it in a streaming way). > > If reports are still welcome for TriG, N-Triples, and N-Quads, > I would be most happy if you could include them. > > Thanks in advance, > > Ruben
Received on Wednesday, 31 December 2014 03:33:16 UTC