- Documentation
- Reference manual
 - Packages
- SWI-Prolog Semantic Web Library 3.0
- Introduction
 - Scalability
 - Two RDF APIs
 - Plugin modules for rdf_db
 - library(semweb/turtle): Turtle: Terse RDF Triple Language
 - library(semweb/rdf_ntriples): Process files in the RDF N-Triples format
 - library(semweb/rdfa): Extract RDF from an HTML or XML DOM
 - library(semweb/rdfs): RDFS related queries
 - Managing RDF input files
 - library(semweb/sparql_client): SPARQL client library
 - library(semweb/rdf_compare): Compare RDF graphs
 - library(semweb/rdf_portray): Portray RDF resources
 - Related packages
 - Version 3 release notes
 
 
 - SWI-Prolog Semantic Web Library 3.0
 
 
12 library(semweb/rdf_portray): Portray RDF resources
- To be done
 - - Define alternate predicate to use for providing a comment 
- Use rdf:type if there is no meaningful label?
- Smarter guess whether or not the local identifier might be meaningful to the user without a comment. I.e. does it look `word-like'? 
This module defines rules for user:portray/1 to help tracing and debugging RDF resources by printing them in a more concise representation and optionally adding comment from the label field to help the user interpreting the URL. The main predicates are:
- rdf_portray_as/1 defines the overall style
 - rdf_portray_lang/1 selects languages for extracting label comments
 
- [det]rdf_portray_as(+Style)
 - Set the style used to portray resources. Style is one of:
prefix:id- Write as NS:ID, compatible with what can be handed to the rdf predicates. This is the default.
 writeq- Use quoted write of the full resource.
 prefix:label- Write namespace followed by the label. This format cannot be handed to rdf/3 and friends, but can be useful if resource-names are meaningless identifiers.
 prefix:id=label- This combines prefix:id with prefix:label, providing both human readable output and output that can be pasted into the commandline.
 
 - [det]rdf_portray_lang(+Lang)
 - If Lang is a list, set the list or preferred languages. If it is a single atom, push this language as the most preferred language.