- From: Pat Hayes <phayes@ihmc.us>
- Date: Wed, 3 Jul 2013 23:37:30 -0500
- To: David Booth <david@dbooth.org>
- Cc: Robert Sanderson <azaroth42@gmail.com>, Niklas Lindström <lindstream@gmail.com>, Linked JSON <public-linked-json@w3.org>, RDF WG <public-rdf-wg@w3.org>, public-openannotation <public-openannotation@w3.org>
On Jul 3, 2013, at 11:03 PM, David Booth wrote: > On 07/03/2013 11:05 PM, Pat Hayes wrote: >> >> On Jul 3, 2013, at 2:55 PM, Robert Sanderson wrote: >> >>> >>> I would be very interested to hear Pat's take on the matter, but >>> this does appear to be a valid concern with the reuse of >>> owl:sameAs. It seems that we're back to minting a new predicate to >>> link the resource and the head node of the list? >> >> You could do that, and it might be operationally a smart thing to do >> (see below). But David's worry will still apply to it. GIven what you >> want it to mean, its actual *semantics* are going to be the same as >> that of owl:sameAs, viz. that it means "=". > > But in this case they really don't need the semantics to be the same as owl:sameAs semantics, even if they did describe it that way. All they really need is to link the two nodes in a recognizable way. I hear what you are saying, but I think you will find that the actual *semantics* - the truth conditions on your json:link predicate - will have to be that it is true when its subject is the same as its object, ie it means s=o, just like owl:sameAs does. And given that *semantics*, the substitution of one side for the other will in fact be a *valid entailment*. Of course, you can say that for other, non-semantic, reasons you want to disallow such a substitution, which is fine: but you could also say this about this usage of owl:sameAs. There might well be pragmatic reasons for using a different property name (easier to recognize and check, avoids confusing OWL reasoners,. etc.), but my point is only that these are indeed syntactic/pragmatic reasons, not semantic. Just to keep the discussion clear, please don't say that json:link is described as equality but is not really equality, or some such nonsense. Pat > > David > >> And given that semantics, >> it will in fact be logically valid to substitute its subject term for >> its object term. You can of course say that you don't want to allow >> this, but it will be *semantically* valid as a logical entailment. >> And you can *say* that you don't want the owl:SameAs substitutions to >> be performed on lists. On the other hand, this "saying" might have >> more bite, as it were, if you say it about a term that you own and >> whose meaning is defined in your documents (that its root IRI will >> link back to, in the great emerging LD tradition :-) >> >> Pat >> >> PS. BTW, don't ask the RDF WG to add some kind of rdf:sameAs to RDF. >> They won't do it. The established usage in the RDF world is to use >> owl:sameAs. >> >>> >>> Rob >>> >>> >>> On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 1:47 PM, Niklas Lindström >>> <lindstream@gmail.com> wrote: Thanks David, >>> >>> This worry was fleeting in the back of my mind as well, but I >>> didn't really express it. >>> >>> It is also part of why I've been reluctant to proceed with the >>> otherwise fairly low-hanging fruit of extending JSON-LD to support >>> identifying and making statements about the front of an RDF list >>> (by simply allowing '@id' and other terms in an object representing >>> a literal list – i.e. an object using the '@list' key). >>> >>> (.. Not to mention that this would take us closer to asking why we >>> can't do that for literals as well.. And then eventually discuss >>> equating '@value' and 'rdf:value'.. Not that I am theoretically >>> against such an evolution of RDF (that could solve the troublesome >>> "literals as subjects" debate, render SKOS-XL obsolete, and even >>> improve text search in SPARQL). But that would be nothing short of >>> a RDF 2.0 endeavour. Which is way beyond this..) >>> >>> Cheers, Niklas >>> >>> >>> >>> On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 8:40 PM, David Booth <david@dbooth.org> >>> wrote: Hi Rob, >>> >>> The owl:sameAs solution does have the right semantics, and it has >>> the benefit of using a standard term. But I'm afraid there may be >>> a downside as well, and I'm copying Pat to get his take on it. >>> Normally when you have: >>> >>> <http://example/foo> owl:sameAs _:b1 . >>> >>> in a graph, the blank node can be completely eliminated from the >>> graph and replaced by <http://example/foo>, because the semantics >>> of a blank node merely indicates the *existence* of a resource, but >>> the owl:sameAs assertion gives a concrete identity >>> <http://example/foo> to that resource. But in your case, you want >>> to *avoid* having that blank node eliminated. Thus, there could be >>> some risk that smart software that attempts to eliminate >>> unnecessary nodes and assertions (such as by making the graph >>> "lean") >>> https://dvcs.w3.org/hg/rdf/raw-file/default/rdf-mt/index.html#dfn-lean >>> >>> > may eliminate the blank node triple that the Turtle serializer would need for serializing back to the original list syntax. >>> >>> In other words, if the original graph said: >>> >>> ... _:b1 a rdf:List . _:b1 rdf:first :s1 . ... >>> >>> and you used owl:sameAs as above, then by owl:sameAs entailment we >>> would have: >>> >>> ... _:b1 a rdf:List . <http://example/foo> a rdf:List . _:b1 >>> rdf:first :s1 . <http://example/foo> rdf:first :s1 . ... >>> >>> and if that were made lean then it would become: >>> >>> ... <http://example/foo> a rdf:List . <http://example/foo> >>> rdf:first :s1 . ... >>> >>> which would not serialize back to the original Turtle list ( :s1 >>> ... ). >>> >>> David >>> >>> >>> On 07/03/2013 11:15 AM, Robert Sanderson wrote: >>> >>> Dear all, >>> >>> TL;DR version: I think that owl:sameAs is a great solution for >>> the predicate. >>> >>> Thank you for the discussion! >>> >>> The primary use case for lists with identity (and other >>> properties, potentially) in Open Annotation is to have an ordered >>> workflow for selecting the correct part of a document. For example, >>> EPub documents are just zip files with HTML and other resources >>> packed inside them, so it would be beneficial to reuse the methods >>> for selecting the correct segment of a resource on the web with the >>> resources inside the EPub, but first the file within the zip must >>> be selected. >>> >>> Thus we would want: >>> >>> <target1> a oa:SpecificResource ; oa:hasSelector <list1> ; >>> oa:hasSource <epub1> . >>> >>> <list1> a oa:List, rdf:List ; rdf:isList (<FileSelector>, >>> <TextSelector>) . // Or something similar here >>> >>> <FileSelector> a idpf:EpubFileSelector ; rdf:value "/chapter1.html" >>> . >>> >>> <TextSelector> a oa:TextQuoteSelector ; oa:prefix "bit before the >>> segment" oa:exact "The text of the annotated segment" oa:suffix >>> "bit after the segment" >>> >>> >>> The relevant part of the specification is: >>> http://www.openannotation.org/spec/core/multiplicity.html#List (and >>> you'll see the long red editor's note!) >>> >>> I think that Pat's suggestion of owl:sameAs is very appropriate. >>> It works in the different syntaxes and has the semantics that the >>> resources are the same -- in the case above the blank node that has >>> first of <FileSelector> and the resource <list1>. >>> >>> The other options discussed were rdf:value, which is extremely >>> fuzzy and in JSON-LD context you couldn't assert that it always had >>> a list as its object if it was also used with a literal. In which >>> case it would result in multiple rdf:value predicates, each with >>> one of the list items as object. That led to discussing a new >>> predicate, such as listItems, listValue, isList, or similar. This >>> would have the implication that the blank node and the main >>> identified resource were different resources, as compared to the >>> proposal of owl:sameAs which would mean they were the same >>> resource. >>> >>> Rob >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> On Wed, Jul 3, 2013 at 12:30 AM, Pat Hayes <phayes@ihmc.us >>> <mailto:phayes@ihmc.us>> wrote: >>> >>> >>> On Jul 2, 2013, at 11:38 PM, David Booth wrote: >>> >>>> On 07/03/2013 12:07 AM, Pat Hayes wrote: >>>>> >>>>> On Jul 2, 2013, at 12:40 PM, Manu Sporny wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Thanks to Niklas for scribing. The minutes from this week's >>>>>> telecon are now available. >>>>>> >>>>>> http://json-ld.org/minutes/2013-07-02/ >>>>>> >>>>>> Full text of the discussion follows including a link to the >>>>>> audio transcript: >>>>>> >>>>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------- >>> >>>>>> >>>> >>>>>> >>>> JSON-LD Community Group Telecon Minutes for 2013-07-02 >>>>>> >>>>>> Agenda: >>>>>> >>> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-linked-json/2013Jul/0000.html >>> >>> >>>> >>>>>> >>>> Topics: >>>>>> 1. Assigning Properties to Lists 2. GSoC update 3. JSON-LD / >>>>>> RDF Alignment 4. Lists in the JSON and RDF data models 5. >>>>>> Default interpretation of JSON arrays Resolutions: 1. Create >>>>>> an issue in the RDF WG to formalize a way to express lists >>>>>> that need to be identified with a URL and annotated using >>>>>> properties. >>>>> >>>>> If I understand this correctly, this can be done in RDF >>>>> already. For example, the list [ x:a, x:b, 27 ] identified by >>>>> the URI ex:thisList and possessing the property x:prop with >>>>> value x:value is >>> described by >>>>> this RDF: >>>>> >>>>> ex:thisList rdf:type rdf:List . ex:thisList rdf:first x:a . >>>>> ex:thisLIst rdf:rest _:1 . _:1 rdf:first x:b . _:1 rdf:rest >>>>> _:2 >>> . _:2 >>>>> rdf:first "27"^^xsd:number . _:2 rdf:rest rdf:nil . >>>>> ex:thisLIst x:prop x:value . >>>> >>>> If I have understood the issue properly, the reason for raising >>>> this issue in the RDF working group is that this is not >>>> necessarily an advisable usage pattern for the RDF list >>> vocabulary, because such a list cannot be serialized using >>> Turtle's list syntax: (x:a x:b 27). >>> >>> Yes, you are right, and I confess I had never noticed this >>> limitation of Turtle previously. OK, let me change the RDF to the >>> following, keeping the list bnodes but using owl:sameAs. (You can >>> of course use some other property indicating equality if y'all >>> prefer.): >>> >>> ex:thisLIst rdf:type rdf:List . ex:thisLIst x:prop x:value . >>> ex:thisList owl:sameAs _:3 . _:3 rdf:first x:a . _:3 rdf:rest _:1 >>> . _:1 rdf:rest _:2 . _:2 rdf:first "27"^^xsd:number . _:2 rdf:rest >>> rdf:nil . >>> >>> Or, in Turtle: >>> >>> ex:thisList rdf:type rdf:List ; x:prop x:value ; owl:sameAs (x:a , >>> x:b, 27 ) . >>> >>> and you could probably omit the first triple, or even introduce >>> your own category of JSON-lists and say it is one of those, >>> instead, if that would help with triggering appropriate >>> translations into other formats (or to distinguish these from eg >>> RDF lists used to encode OWL syntax.) >>> >>>> It falls into a similar category as other uncommon uses of the >>> RDF List vocabulary:... >>> >>> ...no, it doesn't. See remark below. >>> >>> Pat >>> >>>> other uncommon uses of the RDF List vocabulary: >>>> http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-schema/#ch_collectionvocab [[ Note: RDFS >>>> does not require that there be only one first element >>> of a list-like structure, or even that a list-like structure have >>> a first element. >>>> ]] >>>> >>>> While not prohibited by RDF, such uncommon uses of the RDF list >>> vocabulary are certainly seen by some as being somewhat >>> anti-social. Thus, the question is whether such uses should be >>> *encouraged*. >>>> >>>> David >>>> >>>>> >>>>> Pat >>>>> >>>>>> Chair: Manu Sporny Scribe: Niklas Lindström Present: Niklas >>>>>> Lindström, Robert Sanderson, Markus Lanthaler, Manu Sporny, >>>>>> David Booth, David I. Lehn, Vikash Agrawal Audio: >>>>>> http://json-ld.org/minutes/2013-07-02/audio.ogg >>>>>> >>>>>> Niklas Lindström is scribing. >>>>>> >>>>>> Topic: Assigning Properties to Lists >>>>>> >>>>>> Markus Lanthaler: >>>>>> https://github.com/json-ld/json-ld.org/issues/75 Robert >>>>>> Sanderson: we'd very much like to give rdf:Lists identity, >>>>>> so that they can be referenced from multiple graphs. Also to >>>>>> describe them with other properties ... in openannotation, we >>>>>> need lists to define a selector which determines which part >>>>>> is annotated ... for instance, which piece of a text is >>>>>> annotated, with "before" and "after" also recorded (most >>>>>> clients work like that) ... Futhermore, IDPF has agreed to >>>>>> use openannotation for all EPub books ... EPubs, being zip >>>>>> files with a bunch of files ... To define a selector here >>>>>> (take the EPub, select a file, then a part in there) ... So >>>>>> we don't want to reproduce every single selector mechanism. >>>>>> Thus, an ordered list of two selectors would be neeeded. ... >>>>>> We thus need to identify lists, so that we can reuse these >>>>>> selectors in multiple statements. ... I.e. a person wants to >>>>>> disagree with a specific annotation, or place being >>>>>> annotated. ... Furthermore, we have the order of multiple >>>>>> targets, e..g. "the first passage on page three, is derived >>>>>> from the second passage on page five" ... Not as essential, >>>>>> since it's not really machine actionable ... Another project >>>>>> using lists is Shared Canvas ... We'd very much like to use >>>>>> JSON-LD there too, for selecting pages, using a list of pages >>>>>> and so forth ... For this, we took the "list items" approach; >>>>>> the list doesn't need to be referenced directly. Markus >>>>>> Lanthaler: robert, do you have the link of an example at >>>>>> hand? ... But it might be nice to have this standardized, so >>>>>> people don't reinvent list items all the time. ... at the >>>>>> mailing list and also the OA community meeting in Europe, we >>>>>> agreed that we don't want to change the model to accomodate >>>>>> different syntaxes ... We want to recommend JSON-LD Manu >>>>>> Sporny: what's the timeline for these needs / when would the >>>>>> WG close Robert Sanderson: at the moment, the CG is in an >>>>>> implementation phase. We need to dicuss with Ivan, but we >>>>>> hope to move from CG to WG next year Manu Sporny: we're very >>>>>> close to CR in JSON-LD. If we'd add his feature in, it would >>>>>> put us back for many months. Could we add this for JSON-LD >>>>>> 1.1? ... If we think we can put the feature in, I think we >>>>>> can easily convince implementers to add it. If we add it to >>>>>> the test suite, other implementers would add it. ... So for >>>>>> practical purposes, we aim for it to be added within a year >>>>>> or so. Robert Sanderson: Yes, that approach could work for >>>>>> us. Given that your'e much further ahead. It's not our >>>>>> prefered option, since for implementations, it might be >>>>>> unpredictable. ... Also, changing this for OA now is much >>>>>> easier than when in a WG ... I don't believe anyone has >>>>>> implemented it yet, but IDPF needs this to be implementable >>>>>> Manu Sporny: so we may put it in jSON-LD 1.1 Niklas >>>>>> Lindström: First thing, as far as I know, Turtle doesn't >>>>>> support this syntax either. Given that you have a shorthand >>>>>> in Turtle.... actually, none of the formats in RDF/XML and >>>>>> Turtle support this sort of list syntax. [scribe assist by >>>>>> Manu Sporny] Markus Lanthaler: niklasl, AFAICT they currently >>>>>> set rdf:rest to a Turtle list Niklas Lindström: Have you >>>>>> discussed that as well? Am I missing something? [scribe >>>>>> assist by Manu Sporny] Robert Sanderson: No, I don't think >>>>>> you missed anything. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Robert >>>>>> Sanderson: The identity is easier in RDF/XML - you have the >>>>>> property for the URI. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Robert >>>>>> Sanderson: We did consider the other serializations, it's >>>>>> not a ubiquitous feature, but it would be nice to have in >>>>>> JSON-LD. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: >>>>>> Right, the main argument when we had the issue, even though >>>>>> it's in the Primer that says there is nothing preventing >>>>>> lists from being described, multiple start properties, etc. >>>>>> None of the core syntaxes allow it, it's not intended to be >>>>>> used like that. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas >>>>>> Lindström: They're supposed to be used as syntactic >>>>>> constructs.... model-wise, they're not really a part of RDF. >>> >>> That is not correct. Collections were intended to be an integral >>> part of RDF. They were used by OWL as a syntactic device for >>> encoding OWL syntax in RDF, making them unavailable inside OWL, >>> but that is an OWL/RDF issue. (IMO, with hindsight, this was a >>> serious mistake in designing the OWL/RDF layering. But I was there >>> at the time and didn't see the danger myself, so mia culpa.) >>> >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: If this is >>>>>> supported in JSON-LD, it would be a lot easier to deviate >>>>>> from the recommended usage pattern.... also making it harder >>>>>> for a future RDF spec, who wants to add lists as a native >>>>>> part of the model [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas >>>>>> Lindström: You can still use rdf:first / rdf:next >>>>>> explicitly today. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Robert >>>>>> Sanderson: I agree. The notion of order in a graph is always >>>>>> problematic. Not the common method to have a resource that is >>>>>> a list and has identity. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] >>>>>> Robert Sanderson: Maybe RDF COncepts 1.1 should discuss it. >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] David Booth: Yeah, RDF WG >>>>>> should consider this. I agree with Niklas. It doesn't fit w/ >>>>>> the usual list pattern. Important to consider implications. >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] ... Here's an example: >>>>>> http://www.openannotation.org/spec/core/multiplicity.html#List >>> >>>>>> >>>> Robert Sanderson: That's it exactly, thanks Niklas1 Manu Sporny: >>>>>> any other thoughs on this? Markus Lanthaler: it would make >>>>>> it hard to expect compaction to behave as predicted ... also, >>>>>> compaction might be more complex Manu Sporny: Yes. We wanted >>>>>> to stay away from it since it might be a mine field in >>>>>> general. ... that said, there might be a case for this. >>>>>> Niklas Lindström: Agree with Manu's point - there might be >>>>>> something new that's interesting here. I don't think we >>>>>> should do it w/o discussing implications. Algorithmic >>>>>> complexity for JSON-LD API and implementations. It might be >>>>>> almost as problematic as bnodes as predicates. It's possible >>>>>> to do this in raw RDF. It seems highly obvious that you can >>>>>> add ID in other properties. On the other hands you... >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Manu Sporny: ...can do it w/ >>>>>> literals. Niklas Lindström: This borders on the syntactical >>>>>> collapse. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Markus Lanthaler: >>>>>> syntactically having a property carrying the actual list is >>>>>> nearly indistinguishable as the requested form (using "@list" >>>>>> as key) Robert Sanderson: I agree. The easisest solution for >>>>>> everyone would be to have a "listItem" as a property. ... and >>>>>> for the RDF WG, it might be good to define a dedicated >>>>>> predicate for it. rdf:value is explicitly fuzzy, so you can't >>>>>> always expect a list. David Booth: Robert, would it be >>>>>> feasible to just wrap the list in another object, and attach >>>>>> the additional info to the wrapper object? (I apologize that >>>>>> I have not fully grokked the problem, so this suggestion may >>>>>> not be helpful.) ... It would be easier to sell changing the >>>>>> model if there was another predicate for this. Manu Sporny: >>>>>> so a specific vocabulary for lists would be beneficial in >>>>>> general, working in all syntaxes ... would that adress this >>>>>> issue? If we quickly create a list vocabulary? Robert >>>>>> Sanderson: I think so. Not preferable duing the discussions >>>>>> we had, but the syntactic arguments may sway this position. >>>>>> ... A single, interoperable solution is preferable. Manu >>>>>> Sporny: anyone objects to open issue 75, to continue this >>>>>> dicussion? Niklas Lindström: I think we should try to have >>>>>> this as an RDF issue - it really would not come up if lists >>>>>> were core to the RDF model. It's a sore spot in RDF Concepts. >>>>>> I think we should push it over to the RDF WG immediately. >>>>>> It's arbitrary if we or OA try to push something forward, it >>>>>> won't solve the real problem.... not in rdf schema vocab. >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Robert Sanderson: +1 to >>>>>> Niklas >>>>>> >>>>>> PROPOSAL: Create an issue in the RDF WG to formalize a way >>>>>> to express lists that need to be identified with a URL and >>>>>> annotated using properties. >>>>>> >>>>>> Manu Sporny: +1 David Booth: +1 Robert Sanderson: +1 Niklas >>>>>> Lindström: +1 could be someything like rdf:listValue David I. >>>>>> Lehn: +1 Markus Lanthaler: +1 >>>>>> >>>>>> RESOLUTION: Create an issue in the RDF WG to formalize a way >>>>>> to express lists that need to be identified with a URL and >>>>>> annotated using properties. >>>>>> >>>>>> Topic: GSoC update >>>>>> >>>>>> Vikash Agrawal: what's broken in the playground? Manu >>>>>> Sporny: a bit weird ui paradigm when clicking on expanded >>>>>> form; headings for JSON-LD Context stay, but the input box >>>>>> disappears. Markus Lanthaler: >>>>>> http://www.markus-lanthaler.com/jsonld/playground/ Markus >>>>>> Lanthaler: the headers stay but the inputs disappear. >>>>>> Previously headers were toggled off if input areas weren't >>>>>> applicable Manu Sporny: play around a bit. I think the old >>>>>> way is better. There may be something even better, but right >>>>>> now, the problem is that something not used is still shown. >>>>>> Vikash Agrawal: this is bug 50 ... by this week, this should >>>>>> be done. Next week is a creator app. Markus Lanthaler: could >>>>>> we discuss these things on the mailing list or the issue >>>>>> tracker? Manu Sporny: email danbri and gregg regarding a >>>>>> schema.org <http://schema.org> JSON-LD >>> context Markus Lanthaler: >>>>>> vikash, here's Sandro's schema.org <http://schema.org> >>>>>> context: >>> >>>>>> http://www.w3.org/People/Sandro/schema-org-context.jsonld >>>>>> Markus Lanthaler: for the creator app, have a look at: >>>>>> http://schema-creator.org/ >>>>>> >>>>>> Topic: JSON-LD / RDF Alignment >>>>>> >>>>>> Manu Sporny: >>>>>> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-rdf-wg/2013Jun/0233.html >>> >>>>>> >>>> >>>>>> >>>> Manu Sporny: I went into the spec and tried to integrate what >>>> we >>>>>> have consensus on. ... see the email link above for a list >>>>>> of things. ... everything should be there except for >>>>>> skolemization David Booth: I just found it, but I think it >>>>>> looks great (just some minor things) Manu Sporny: would it >>>>>> adress the LC comment? David Booth: It might. It's in the >>>>>> right direction. Manu Sporny: >>>>>> >>> http://json-ld.org/spec/ED/json-ld/20130630/diff-20130411.html#data-model >>> >>> >>>> >>>>>> >>>> Manu Sporny: next, Peter's changes. Appendix A was changed to >>>>>> flat out say that JSON-LD uses an extended RDF model. ... we >>>>>> just say "Data Model", and that it's an extension of the RDF >>>>>> data model. Markus Lanthaler: >>>>>> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-rdf-wg/2013Jul/0010.html >>> >>>>>> >>>> >>>>>> >>>> ... we need to have a resonse from Peter on this. >>>>>> David Booth: I'd expect it to be, to the extent that I can >>>>>> channel Peter. David Booth: Every node is an IRI , a blank >>>>>> node , a JSON-LD value , or a list . David Booth: >>>>>> restricting the literal space to JSON-LD values is a >>>>>> restriction rather than an extension to the RDF model. Robert >>>>>> Sanderson: Sorry, have to attend another call now, though >>>>>> would like to have stayed for the rest of the conversation. >>>>>> Thanks everyone for the discussion re lists. ... and I don't >>>>>> think that lists need to be mentioned there; they are just >>>>>> sugar. Markus Lanthaler: "A JSON-LD value is a string, a >>>>>> number, true or false, a typed value, or a language-tagged >>>>>> string." Markus Lanthaler: thanks for joining robert Manu >>>>>> Sporny: on top, we extension the value space to json true >>>>>> and false, numbers and strings. David Booth: A JSON-LD value >>>>>> is a string , a number , true or false , a typed value , or a >>>>>> language-tagged string . David Booth: it wasn't clear that >>>>>> those lined up with the corresponding RDF value space. Manu >>>>>> and David agree that the JSON number value space is more >>>>>> general. Manu Sporny: different lexical spaces for booleans >>>>>> in xsd and json >>>>>> >>>>>> Topic: Lists in the JSON and RDF data models >>>>>> >>>>>> David Booth: What about lists, aren't they the same as >>>>>> expressed in RDF? Manu Sporny: not convinced that they are.. >>>>>> ... we need to translate it to something in the data model. >>>>>> In RDF, it translates to the list properties. There is >>>>>> nothing in RDF concepts to point to. ... many just assumes >>>>>> that it's basically part of the data model, but it's formally >>>>>> not David Booth: why not point to rdf schema? Manu Sporny: >>>>>> not part of the rdf data model. Niklas Lindström: Yeah, just >>>>>> a comment. Could we correlate this RDF Concepts problem w/ >>>>>> the suggestion wrt. list values. [scribe assist by Manu >>>>>> Sporny] David Booth: RDF lists: David Booth: >>>>>> http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-schema/#ch_list Niklas Lindström: >>>>>> Clearly, lists are under-specified. [scribe assist by Manu >>>>>> Sporny] Niklas Lindström: Maybe we should expand RDF >>>>>> Concepts that is present in the 2004 Primer and the Syntax >>>>>> that I scanned previously. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] >>>>>> Manu Sporny: but does rdf schema extend the rdf data model? >>>>>> David Booth: no, just a convention which is using the rdf >>>>>> data model Markus Lanthaler: but's still just a vocabulary. >>>>>> In JSON-LD, we use [a keyword and] an array ... it's like a >>>>>> node type [just as literals] Manu Sporny: the JSON-LD data >>>>>> model does not talk about rdf:first and rdf:rest David Booth: >>>>>> I don't think any test cases needs to be changed by the way >>>>>> this is described. So it's just a question of how this >>>>>> concept is being described. At present, it's described as a >>>>>> difference. Manu Sporny: True. We only change how you think >>>>>> about the data model. Manu Sporny: if we make an argument >>>>>> about the difference between native JSON literals and RDF >>>>>> literals, we need to explain the difference of expressing >>>>>> lists as well. David Booth: I don't see the benefit as a >>>>>> difference, from an RDF perspective. Niklas Lindström: I >>>>>> think I can answer re: benefit of having different model wrt. >>>>>> JSON lists and RDF lists. In JSON, there are arrays, those >>>>>> arrays represent repeated statements in RDF> [scribe assist >>>>>> by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: RDF people understands >>>>>> that intuitively. We mention @set because people that don't >>>>>> understand RDF, but do understand mathematical sets.... >>>>>> ordered list is more popular than sets in programming. >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: We need a >>>>>> way to explain lists in JSON-LD, in the same way that we >>>>>> explain sets, and other things. Not in a way that introduces >>>>>> rdf:first and rdf:next. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] David >>>>>> Booth: Bottom line: I do not see a need to call out lists as >>>>>> being a difference from the RDF model, but I'm okay with it >>>>>> being mentioned, in part because I'd like to push RDF to have >>>>>> native lists. Markus Lanthaler: manu, did you see >>>>>> http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-rdf-wg/2013Jul/0010.html >>> >>>>>> >>>> >>>>>> >>>> already? >>>>>> >>>>>> Topic: Default interpretation of JSON arrays >>>>>> >>>>>> David Booth: it seems strange to have @set (unordered) as >>>>>> the default ... in regular json, the default is ordered >>>>>> Markus Lanthaler: We discussed this quite a bit in the >>>>>> beginning, the rationale was that the RDF that was generated >>>>>> would be unmanageable - lots of blank nodes, lots of >>>>>> rdf:first/rdf:rest, you couldn't work w/ the RDF anymore. >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Markus Lanthaler: we >>>>>> discussed it quite a bit in the beginning. The rationale we >>>>>> came up with is that the generated RDF would be very >>>>>> gruesome, using rdf lists for everything. ... hundreds of >>>>>> blank nodes for everything. Niklas Lindström: Yeah, I agree. >>>>>> That's the rationale. While it's true that arrays in JSON are >>>>>> ordered in their nature, in all the JSON-LD examples, they >>>>>> are commonly only sets. There is no real order. JSON-LD is >>>>>> intended to be used w/ RDF properties, there are only a >>>>>> handful of common RDF properties - author, contributorList, >>>>>> propertyChainAction, where the order is semantic, it means >>>>>> something. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: >>>>>> In every other case, it's just a bundle of things. I think >>>>>> that's the better case - explicitly say order doesn't mean >>>>>> anything. The same thinking has obscured lots of things wrt. >>>>>> XML. You can rely on the order of the elements, not sure if >>>>>> you should. It's better to say that "you can't rely on the >>>>>> order", unless someone says so explicitly. [scribe assist by >>>>>> Manu Sporny] David Booth: As a programmer, I'd use the exact >>>>>> opposite rationale. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] David >>>>>> Booth: So if the default were changed to being ordered, then >>>>>> the examples would have to be changed to add @set? Markus >>>>>> Lanthaler: https://github.com/json-ld/json-ld.org/issues/12 >>>>>> Niklas Lindström: We discussed whether we should do it in the >>>>>> @context, we could define @set to be the default. [scribe >>>>>> assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: I agree w/ David >>>>>> that as a programmer, you think like that. Unless you think >>>>>> otherwise. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] David Booth: There >>>>>> is also minimal changes going from JSON to JSON-LD. [scribe >>>>>> assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: Datasets on the Web, >>>>>> you never know if the order is intentional or not. It's >>>>>> better to assume that it's not ordered. [scribe assist by >>>>>> Manu Sporny] Markus Lanthaler: JSON-LD can already serialize >>>>>> the same data in so many ways already - remote contexts, you >>>>>> can't really interpret the data anymore by just looking at >>>>>> it. Maybe doing it in a processor flag, but not in the >>>>>> context. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: >>>>>> I'd like to be able to do this in the context. "@container": >>>>>> "@set" would be useful to me. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] >>>>>> David Booth: Can we have a global way to indicate @set ? >>>>>> Niklas Lindström: Yeah, but I could wait for this feature. >>>>>> [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] David Booth: I'm worried >>>>>> about the element of surprise. It reverses the common >>>>>> expectation. Manu Sporny: It has not come up as a real issue >>>>>> from anywere though. Markus Lanthaler: Is there a use case >>>>>> for this? [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] Markus Lanthaler: >>>>>> In the majority of instances, the order is irrelevant David >>>>>> Booth: yes, quite possible Manu Sporny: a change could also >>>>>> backfire at this stage ... we could potentially have a >>>>>> JSON-LD 1.1, for e.g. this. David Booth: I think the best >>>>>> solution would be a simple global way to specify @set, and >>>>>> user get used to always doing that. Niklas Lindström: I >>>>>> think that it can't fly from my point of view - given that >>>>>> for every case where I've seen order having meaning, it's >>>>>> always been a very specific technical reason. Implicitly >>>>>> ordered things as properties on the object. In every specific >>>>>> scenario where order is used.... [scribe missed] [scribe >>>>>> assist by Manu Sporny] Niklas Lindström: check out >>>>>> schema.org >>> <http://schema.org>· only a handful >>> >>>>>> where the meaning is explicitly ordered: >>>>>> http://www.w3.org/People/Sandro/schema-org-context.jsonld >>>>>> Niklas Lindström: I might be open that it should be ordered, >>>>>> but not by default. [scribe assist by Manu Sporny] >>>>>> >>>>>> -- manu >>>>>> >>>>>> -- Manu Sporny (skype: msporny, twitter: manusporny, G+: >>>>>> +Manu Sporny) Founder/CEO - Digital Bazaar, Inc. blog: >>>>>> Meritora - Web payments commercial launch >>>>>> http://blog.meritora.com/launch/ >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> >>>>> ------------------------------------------------------------ >>>>> IHMC (850)434 8903 or (650)494 3973 40 South Alcaniz St. >>>>> (850)202 4416 office Pensacola >>>>> (850)202 4440 fax FL 32502 >>>>> (850)291 0667 mobile phayesAT-SIGNihmc.us >>>>> http://www.ihmc.us/users/phayes >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> >>>> >>> >>> ------------------------------------------------------------ IHMC >>> (850)434 8903 or (650)494 3973 40 South Alcaniz St. >>> (850)202 4416 office Pensacola >>> (850)202 4440 fax FL 32502 (850)291 >>> 0667 mobile phayesAT-SIGNihmc.us http://www.ihmc.us/users/phayes >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------ IHMC >> (850)434 8903 or (650)494 3973 40 South Alcaniz St. >> (850)202 4416 office Pensacola (850)202 >> 4440 fax FL 32502 (850)291 0667 >> mobile phayesAT-SIGNihmc.us http://www.ihmc.us/users/phayes >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >> > ------------------------------------------------------------ IHMC (850)434 8903 or (650)494 3973 40 South Alcaniz St. (850)202 4416 office Pensacola (850)202 4440 fax FL 32502 (850)291 0667 mobile phayesAT-SIGNihmc.us http://www.ihmc.us/users/phayes
Received on Thursday, 4 July 2013 04:38:00 UTC