turtle.pl -- Turtle: Terse RDF Triple Language
This module implements the Turtle language for representing the RDF triple model as defined by Dave Beckett from the Institute for Learning and Research Technology University of Bristol and later standardized by the W3C RDF working group.
This module acts as a plugin to rdf_load/2, for processing files with
one of the extensions .ttl
or .n3
.
- rdf_read_turtle(+Input, -Triples, +Options)
- Read a stream or file into a set of triples or quadruples (if
faced with TRiG input) of the format
rdf(Subject, Predicate, Object [, Graph])
The representation is consistent with the SWI-Prolog RDF/XML and ntriples parsers. Provided options are:
- base_uri(+BaseURI)
- Initial base URI. Defaults to file://<file> for loading files.
- anon_prefix(+Prefix)
- Blank nodes are generated as <Prefix>1, <Prefix>2, etc.
If Prefix is not an atom blank nodes are generated as
node(1)
,node(2)
, ... - format(+Format)
- One of
auto
(default),turtle
ortrig
. The auto mode switches to TRiG format of there is a{
before the first triple. Finally, of the format is explicitly stated asturtle
and the file appears to be a TRiG file, a warning is printed and the data is loaded while ignoring the graphs. - resources(URIorIRI)
- Officially, Turtle resources are IRIs. Quite a
few applications however send URIs. By default we
do URI->IRI mapping because this rarely causes errors.
To force strictly conforming mode, pass
iri
. - prefixes(-Pairs)
- Return encountered prefix declarations as a list of Alias-URI
- namespaces(-Pairs)
- Same as
prefixes(Pairs)
. Compatibility to rdf_load/2. - base_used(-Base)
- Base URI used for processing the data. Unified to [] if there is no base-uri.
- on_error(+ErrorMode)
- In
warning
(default), print the error and continue parsing the remainder of the file. Iferror
, abort with an exception on the first error encountered. - error_count(-Count)
- If
on_error(warning)
is active, this option cane be used to retrieve the number of generated errors.
- rdf_load_turtle(+Input, -Triples, +Options)
- rdf_process_turtle(+Input, :OnObject, +Options) is det
- Streaming Turtle parser. The predicate rdf_process_turtle/3
processes Turtle data from Input, calling OnObject with a list
of triples for every Turtle statement found in Input. OnObject
is called as below, where ListOfTriples is a list of
rdf(S,P,O)
terms for a normal Turtle file orrdf(S,P,O,G)
terms if theGRAPH
keyword is used to associate a set of triples in the document with a particular graph. The Graph argument provides the default graph for storing the triples and Line is the line number where the statement started.call(OnObject, ListOfTriples, Graph:Line)
This predicate supports the same Options as rdf_load_turtle/3.
Errors encountered are sent to print_message/2, after which the parser tries to recover and parse the remainder of the data.
- rdf_db:rdf_load_stream(+Format, +Stream, :Options)[multifile]
- (Turtle clauses)
Re-exported predicates
The following predicates are re-exported from other modules
- rdf_save_ntriples(+Spec, :Options) is det
- Save RDF using ntriples format. The ntriples format is a subset of Turtle, writing each triple fully qualified on its own line.
- rdf_save_canonical_trig(+Spec, :Options) is det
- Save triples in a canonical format. See rdf_save_canonical_turtle/2 foir details.
- rdf_save_trig(+Spec, :Options) is det
- Save multiple RDF graphs into a TriG file. Options are the same
as for rdf_save_turtle/2. rdf_save_trig/2 ignores the
graph(+Graph)
option and instead processes one additional option:- graphs(+ListOfGraphs)
- List of graphs to save. When omitted, all graphs in the RDF store are stored in the TriG file.
- rdf_save_canonical_turtle(+Spec, :Options) is det
- Save triples in a canonical format. This is the same as
rdf_save_turtle/2, but using different defaults. In particular:
encoding(utf8)
,indent(0)
,tab_distance(0)
,subject_white_lines(1)
,align_prefixes(false)
,user_prefixes(false)
comment(false)
,group(false)
,single_line_bnodes(true)
- rdf_save_turtle(+Out, :Options) is det
- Save an RDF graph as Turtle. Options processed are:
- a(+Boolean)
- If
true
(default), usea
for the predicaterdf:type
. Otherwise use the full resource. - align_prefixes(+Boolean)
- Nicely align the @prefix declarations
- base(+Base)
- Save relative to the given Base
- canonize_numbers(+Boolean)
- If
true
(defaultfalse
), emit numeric datatypes using Prolog's write to achieve canonical output. - comment(+Boolean)
- It
true
(default), write some informative comments between the output segments - encoding(+Encoding)
- Encoding used for the output stream. Default is UTF-8.
- expand(:Goal)
- Query an alternative graph-representation. See below.
- indent(+Column)
- Indentation for ; -lists. `0' does not indent, but writes on the same line. Default is 8.
- graph(+Graph)
- Save only the named graph
- group(+Boolean)
- If
true
(default), using P-O and O-grouping. - inline_bnodes(+Boolean)
- if
true
(default), inline bnodes that are used once. - abbreviate_literals(+Boolean)
- if
true
(default), omit the type if allowed by turtle. - only_known_prefixes(+Boolean)
- Only use prefix notation for known prefixes. Without, some documents produce huge amounts of prefixes.
- prefixes(+List)
- If provided, uses exactly these prefixes. List is a list of prefix specifications, where each specification is either a term Prefix_-_URI or a prefix that is known to rdf_current_prefix/2.
- silent(+Boolean)
- If
true
(defaultfalse
), do not print the final informational message. - single_line_bnodes(+Bool)
- If
true
(defaultfalse
), write [...] and (...) on a single line. - subject_white_lines(+Count)
- Extra white lines to insert between statements about a different subject. Default is 1.
- tab_distance(+Tab)
- Distance between tab-stops. `0' forces the library to use only spaces for layout. Default is 8.
- user_prefixes(+Boolean)
- If
true
(default), use prefixes from rdf_current_prefix/2.
The option
expand
allows for serializing alternative graph representations. It is called through call/5, where the first argument is the expand-option, followed by S,P,O,G. G is the graph-option (which is by default a variable). This notably allows for writing RDF graphs represented asrdf(S,P,O)
using the following code fragment:triple_in(RDF, S,P,O,_G) :- member(rdf(S,P,O), RDF). ..., rdf_save_turtle(Out, [ expand(triple_in(RDF)) ]),