- From: Sini, Margherita (KCEW) <Margherita.Sini@fao.org>
- Date: Tue, 17 Jun 2008 19:29:27 +0200
- To: SWD WG <public-swd-wg@w3.org>
Dear all, following today teleconference I checked the references to symbols in the SKOS reference and I think what is there perfectly covers the use cases I pointed out. So confirm, no actions to be done and as it is the SKOS reference is fine for symbols. Regards Margherita -----Original Message----- From: public-swd-wg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-swd-wg-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Sini, Margherita (KCEW) Sent: 26 May 2008 19:21 To: SWD WG Subject: RE: Issue-76: SymbolicLabels Dear all, As follow up of this topic I have been assigned the action to make examples of symbols or other annotation in which language is essential and language is not used, so that we can chose when using plain literals and when use datatype literals. I contacted the FAO agrovoc users and linguists to help me on the decision. I will try refer to the examples used already: 1) Chemical symbols: Most of the user mention that inorganic chemistry symbols are international, but for some languages they seems need the translation of the symbol also (Japanese, Thai). 2) Chemical formulas: Most of the user mention that organic compounds formulas (BrCH2CH2Br) are also international, but other alphabets may be used for other compounds (e.g. cyrillic alphabet: 1,2-Dibromoethane will be written as 1,2-дибромэтан). In this case we do need the language indications. 3) Acronyms may exists in Cyrillic also. 4) Other symbols (e.g. food component) may also need language indications (with specific alphabets). So my conclusion is that most of the times we may need language indications. Hope this helps Margherita -----Original Message----- From: public-swd-wg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-swd-wg-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Sini, Margherita (KCEW) Sent: 13 May 2008 18:55 To: SWD WG Subject: Issue-76: SymbolicLabels Dear all, Previous drafts of SKOS included skos:prefSymbol and skos:altSymbol and the issue is if they should be dropped. I am here giving use cases in support of these elements. Of course is they will be dropped then we have to use skos:altLabel to represent those elements. 1) If we take the AGROVOC thesaurus: it contains all the chemical elements, which are currently in agrovoc 60, but could be more than 120... Example: Phosphorus is a term with a specific termcode (5804). Another term exists with code 13015 which is "P (symbol)", and these are related by the USE/UF relationship. BUT, if we could have skos:altSymbol, we would not need to use skos:altLabel and we would not need to indicate "(symbol)" in the agrovoc term. Also: this symbol in general is the same for all languages except for non-latin alphabets. But these could be represented with the skos:altSymbol: in this case we may need to assign a language to the skos:altSymbol. If we decide not, then we could treat the different languages for symbols as skos:altLabel. P (symbol) (EN) P (symbole) (FR) P (símbolo) (ES) 磷元素 (ZH) P (símbolo) (PT) P (CS) リン (JA) พี (สัญลักษณ์) (TH) p (chemická značka) (SK) P (SYMBOL) (DE) P (vegyjel) (HU) P (symbol) (PL) P (simbolo) (IT) पी फास्फोरस का (चिन्ह) (HI) Below the full list of terms in agrovoc indicated as symbols. 2) AGROVOC contains chemical compunds such as "1,2-Dibromoethane", which has the formula BrCH2CH2Br. This formula may be represented as skos:prefSymbol. Chemicals may also have associated other codes coming from internationally recognized standards, such as the CAS Number: 106-93-4.... This can be skos:altSymbol, but in this case we would need an attribute to indicate which skos:altSymbol it is (CAS or others...)... Otherwise again skos:altLabel could be used. Number of these terms in agrovoc: more than 100. 3) Other substances such as ASPARAGINE may have symbols: di-N-acetylchitobiosyl poly(L-asparagine) (source MESH Thesaurus) 4) The food component ontology (or repository) in FAO has food substances with symbols: phosphatidyl choline --> symbol: CHLNP dodecanoic acid. Saturated fatty acid with 12 carbons --> symbol: F12D0 Note these are not a termcodes, but a international symbols given to the substance. These are indipendent from the language. May have alternative symbols in other systems. 5) Vitamins also have symbols: around 20 in agrovoc. Some also in MESH. E.g. alpha-tocopheryl polyethylene glycol succinate --> vitamin E-TPGS 6) The tag skos:prefSymbol and skos:altSymbol may also be used to represent codes referred to the same concept in other systems (specifying the source somehow). 7) Geographical names may have associated symbols: ALBANIA has ISO country code (alpha-3-code) --> ALB But also here we may need to specify an attribute for the code (ISO3 ISO2 UN, etc) 8) Currency Symbols: Q for guatemala, $ for USA, EUR or € for european countries (we may use both skos:prefSymbol and skos:altSymbol). So, based on this I support the idea to keep them. Sorry for not having provided before use cases. Hope this helps. Regards Margherita ------------------ List of terms (symbols) from agrovoc Ag (symbol) (EN) Al (symbol) (EN) Am (symbol) (EN) As (symbol) (EN) Asymbolus analis (EN) Asymbolus spp (EN) Asymbolus vincenti (EN) B (symbol) (EN) Ba (symbol) (EN) Be (symbol) (EN) Bi (symbol) (EN) Br (symbol) (EN) C (symbol) (EN) Ca (symbol) (EN) Cd (symbol) (EN) Cl (symbol) (EN) Cm (symbol) (EN) Co (symbol) (EN) Cr (symbol) (EN) Cs (symbol) (EN) Cu (symbol) (EN) F (symbol) (EN) Fe (symbol) (EN) H (symbol) (EN) Hg (symbol) (EN) I (symbol) (EN) K (symbol) (EN) Li (symbol) (EN) Mg (symbol) (EN) Mn (symbol) (EN) Mo (symbol) (EN) N (symbol) (EN) Na (symbol) (EN) Ni (symbol) (EN) Np (symbol) (EN) O (symbol) (EN) P (symbol) (EN) Pb (symbol) (EN) Pt (symbol) (EN) Pu (symbol) (EN) Ra (symbol) (EN) Rb (symbol) (EN) S (symbol) (EN) Sb (symbol) (EN) Se (symbol) (EN) Si (symbol) (EN) Sisymbrium (EN) Sn (symbol) (EN) Sr (symbol) (EN) Symbionts (EN) Symbiosis (EN) Tc (symbol) (EN) Te (symbol) (EN) Tl (symbol) (EN) U (symbol) (EN) V (symbol) (EN) W (symbol) (EN) Zn (symbol) (EN) Zr (symbol) (EN) ------------------------------
Received on Tuesday, 17 June 2008 17:30:14 UTC