- From: Ivan Herman <ivan@w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 8 May 2012 08:49:03 +0200
- To: "Evain, Jean-Pierre" <evain@ebu.ch>
- Cc: 'Michael Schneider' <schneid@fzi.de>, Bijan Parsia <bparsia@cs.man.ac.uk>, Ian Horrocks <ian.horrocks@cs.ox.ac.uk>, "public-owl-wg@w3.org" <public-owl-wg@w3.org>, "Public-Rif-Wg (E-mail)" <public-rif-wg@w3.org>, "Peter F. Patel-Schneider" <pfpschneider@gmail.com>, Sandro Hawke <sandro@w3.org>
On May 8, 2012, at 08:26 , Evain, Jean-Pierre wrote: > Michael, > > Thanks for the documented explanations. > > However, that looks like very convoluted. Anytime, those who want to solve the issues that you mention can use dateTime. > > But, I am trying to bring RDF and OWL in audiovisual production and I need to express things as simple as: > > - segment video "y" start at time "t" for a duration "d" > > I do not see why I should use any date information in this, it is not relevant. Also because dateTime is a frequent source of errors. > > But maybe it is a bad idea altogether to bring RDF and OWL in audiovisual production? Jean-Pierre, without taking side on whether duration should or should not be part of OWL 2 for reasoning (I do not have enough technical baggage to comment on that): if you use duration today, it is valid RDF (even if RDF2004 still refers to duration as a SHOULD NOT be used, but that might change now with XSD1.1). Not being part of OWL 2 means that you do not get OWL 2 datatype reasoning on those literal values; I presume an OWL 2 reasoner would treat those literal values pretty much as strings. So the question is what you expect from your tooling v.a.v. that particular data. Ivan > > Jean-Pierre > > -----Original Message----- > From: Michael Schneider [mailto:schneid@fzi.de] > Sent: mardi, 8. mai 2012 01:42 > To: Bijan Parsia > Cc: Ian Horrocks; Ivan Herman; public-owl-wg@w3.org; Public-Rif-Wg (E-mail); Peter F. Patel-Schneider; Sandro Hawke; Evain, Jean-Pierre > Subject: Re: status of xsd:duration in OWL (and RIF and SPARQL) - ACTION-164: RDF WG > > Am 07.05.2012 12:42, schrieb Bijan Parsia: >> On 7 May 2012, at 11:29, Michael Schneider wrote: >> >>> Am 07.05.2012 00:19, schrieb Ian Horrocks: >>>> Hi Bijan (et al), >>>> >>>> According to my understanding, we agreed to keep the WG alive so that we could fix any OWL 2 problems caused by changes to XSD 1.1 and update the OWL 2 Rec to reference the XSD 1.1 Rec. It was also foreseen that we could take advantage of this update to fix any editorial errata in the OWL 2 Rec. >>>> >>>> While I agree that the dividing line between editorial errata and substantive changes is not 100% clear, it does seem pretty obvious to me that adding support for a new datatype goes beyond the spirit of this agreement. >>> >>> I agree! >> >> But, you know, who the heck cares about the spirit of some agreement? > > Oops, sorry for having been so short on words - that's not what people > generally expect from me and, certainly, I have more to say than simply > agreeing to Ian. :-) > > Fine, not talking about procedural stuff here, and also not mentioning > (ok, I do) that I believe that it's not so easy to bring a working group > happily back to work after 2 1/2 years, there is still the question > whether these three datatypes are technically appropriate for inclusion > in OWL at all (whether in OWL 2, or OWL 2.1, or whatever). So here is > the situation as I recall it: > > First to say, it's not that these datatypes were simply forgotten to be > considered, as some people seem to believe. Rather, at least two of them > were discussed and then excluded deliberately. Below is my understanding > of why and when this happened. > > NOTE: In the remainder, whenever I refer to the XSD datatype spec, I > refer to the Candidate Recommendation as of 30 April 2009, which was the > one to which the OWL 2 and RIF specs currently refer to. > > 1) xsd:time > > IIRC, the OWL WG had adopted a certain design principle for the > time-related datatypes of OWL 2, which was the "timeOnTimeline" > property, as defined in the XSD datatype spec [1]: each data value in > the value space of a datatype must be exactly one point on the > everlasting time line. > > This is certainly fulfilled by xsd:dateTimeStamp, which is included in > OWL 2. In xsd:time, however, each data value specifies infinitely many > times on the time line: "12:00:00 o'clock" happens every day! In fact, > The XSD spec at that time said [2]: > > time represents instants of time that recur > at the same point in each calendar day, or > that occur in some arbitrary calendar day. > > For OWL 2 reasoners (well, actually for the OWL 2 semantics), such a > definition is a problem, because they have to decide for two given times > whether the two times are equal or not and, if not, whether one time > value is smaller or larger than the other one. Comparisons of this sort > become particularly troublesome, if one tries to compare, say, a > xsd:time value with a xsd:dateTimeStamp value: the dateTimeStamp value > is a fixed point on the time line, but any xsd:time value will refer to > time points both before and after that fixed time point. > > The corresponding OWL WG issue was ISSUE-126 [3]. The description of the > issue swiftly mentions the problems of the time-related datatypes. There > was a long discussion on this issue, as you can see from the list of > references below the issue description; I guess, these mails contain > more discussion on the xsd:time datatype problem, but I haven't read > them all. The eventually accepted proposal (which only mentions > xsd:dateTime but not any of the other time-related datatypes anymore) to > resolve the issue was [4], with resolution at F2F3 [5] and > implementation by ACTION-177 [6]. > > 2) xsd:date > > Here, the situation was different compared to xsd:time, as data values > in the value space of xsd:date do not represent time points, but time > /intervals/, as stated in the old version of the spec [7]: > > date represents top-open intervals of exactly > one day in length on the timelines of dateTime, > beginning on the beginning moment of each day, > up to but not including the beginning moment > of the next day. > > This, of course, is also not compatible with the > single-point-on-timeline design criteria. Consequently, xsd:date was > excluded by the resolution of ISSUE-126 as well. > > 3) xsd:duration > > Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find any discussion on xsd:duration in > the OWL WG mailing list. The reason might be that this datatype was > already excluded in the XSD datatype map of RDF [8]: > > The other built-in XML Schema datatypes are > unsuitable for various reasons, and SHOULD NOT > be used: xsd:duration does not have a well-defined > value space > > In retrospect, this first came to a surprise to me, so let's see how the > value space of xsd:duration was defined in the old CR of XSD 1.1 [9] > (long after the RDF rec, which still referred to XSD 1.0!): > > Duration values can be modelled as two-property > tuples. Each value consists of an integer number > of months and a decimal number of seconds. > > Hrmpf, that appears to me a strange definition: why months? The length > of a month is not well-defined, it may be anything between 28 and 31 > days. So it would be easy to give two xsd:duration literals, basically > consisting of month-second tuples, for which it becomes non-well-defined > whether they are equal or, if not, which of them is smaller or larger. > In fact, the text continues by: > > duration is partially ordered. > > Sorry, but... I'm not clear where this idea of using months as part of > the value space definition came from. Anyhow, for OWL 2 reasoners, > adopting xsd:duration would make things troublesome, as some OWL 2 > ontologies would not have a well-defined semantics then. > > * * * > > Now, so far for the situation at the time of OWL 2 recommendation. All > three datatypes, according to their definitions in the XSD candidate > recommendation at the time of OWL 2 and RIF spec, provided problems for > OWL 2, be it with respect to the one-point-on-timeline design criteria > (xsd:time and xsd:date), or with regard to well-definedness of the (two) > OWL 2 semantics (xsd:time and xsd:duration). I leave it to the > proponents of these datatypes to explain what has changed in the XSD > spec since the recommendation of OWL 2 to allow for these datatypes to > be included now, such that (a) the design decisions made for OWL 2 are > retained and (b) without rendering the semantics of OWL 2 non-well-defined. > > Best, > Michael > > References: > > [1] > <http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-xmlschema11-2-20090430/#vp-dt-timeOnTimeline> > [2] <http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-xmlschema11-2-20090430/#time> > [3] <http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-owl-wg/2008Jun/0138.html> > [4] <http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-owl-wg/2008Jul/0433.html> > [5] <http://www.w3.org/2007/OWL/meeting/2008-07-29#resolution_1> > [6] <http://www.w3.org/2007/OWL/tracker/actions/177> > [7] <http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-xmlschema11-2-20090430/#date> > [8] <http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-mt-20040210/#XSDtable> > [9] <http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-xmlschema11-2-20090430/#duration> > > -- > ......................................................... > Dipl.-Inform. Michael Schneider > Research Scientist, IPE / WIM > > FZI Forschungszentrum Informatik > Haid-und-Neu-Str. 10-14 > 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany > Tel.: +49 721 9654-726 > Fax: +49 721 9654-727 > > michael.schneider@fzi.de > www.fzi.de > > ......................................................... > Forschungszentrum Informatik (FZI) an der Universität Karlsruhe > Stiftung des bürgerlichen Rechts > Stiftung Az: 14-0563.1 Regierungspräsidium Karlsruhe > Vorstand: Dipl. Wi.-Ing. Michael Flor, Prof. Dr. Ralf Reussner, > Prof. Dr. Rudi Studer, Prof. Dr.-Ing. J. Marius Zöllner > Vorsitzender des Kuratoriums: Ministerialdirigent Günther Leßnerkraus > ......................................................... > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > ************************************************** > This email and any files transmitted with it are confidential and intended solely for the use of the individual or entity to whom they are addressed. > If you have received this email in error, please notify the system manager. This footnote also confirms that this email message has been swept by the mailgateway > ************************************************** > ---- Ivan Herman, W3C Semantic Web Activity Lead Home: http://www.w3.org/People/Ivan/ mobile: +31-641044153 FOAF: http://www.ivan-herman.net/foaf.rdf
Received on Tuesday, 8 May 2012 06:46:17 UTC