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RDF::Query(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
RDF::Query(3) |
RDF::Query - A complete SPARQL 1.1 Query and Update implementation for use with
RDF::Trine.
This document describes RDF::Query version 2.918.
# SPARQL SELECT Query
my $query = RDF::Query->new( 'SELECT * WHERE ...' );
my $iterator = $query->execute( $model );
while (my $row = $iterator->next) {
# $row is a HASHref containing variable name -> RDF Term bindings
print $row->{ 'var' }->as_string;
}
# SPARQL CONSTRUCT/DESCRIBE Query
my $query = RDF::Query->new( 'CONSTRUCT { ... } WHERE ...' );
my $iterator = $query->execute( $model );
while (my $st = $iterator->next) {
# $st is a RDF::Trine::Statement object representing an RDF triple
print $st->as_string;
}
# SPARQL ASK Query
my $query = RDF::Query->new( 'ASK WHERE ...' );
my $iterator = $query->execute( $model );
my $bool = $iterator->get_boolean;
if ($bool) {
print "Yes!\n";
}
# RDQL Query
my $query = new RDF::Query ( $rdql, { lang => 'rdql' } );
my @rows = $query->execute( $model ); # in list context, returns all results
RDF::Query allows SPARQL and RDQL queries to be run against an RDF model,
returning rows of matching results.
See <http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf-sparql-query/> for more
information on SPARQL.
See <http://www.w3.org/Submission/2004/SUBM-RDQL-20040109/>
for more information on RDQL.
The 2.9xx versions of RDF::Query introduce some significant changes that will
lead to a stable 3.000 release supporting SPARQL 1.1. Version 2.902 introduces
the SPARQL 1.1 features up to date with the SPARQL 1.1 working drafts as of
its release date. Version 2.902 also is the first version to require use of
RDF::Trine for the underlying RDF store. This change means that RDF::Core is
no longer supported, and while Redland is still supported, its handling of
"contexts" (named graphs) means that existing RDF triples stored in
Redland without associated contexts will not be accessible from RDF::Query.
See RDF::Trine::Store for more information on supported backend stores.
There are many changes in the code between the 1.x and 2.x releases. Most of
these changes will only affect queries that should have raised errors in the
first place (SPARQL parsing, queries that use undefined namespaces, etc.).
Beyond these changes, however, there are some significant API changes that
will affect all users:
- Use of RDF::Trine objects
- All nodes and statements returned by RDF::Query are now RDF::Trine objects
(more specifically, RDF::Trine::Node and RDF::Trine::Statement objects).
This differes from RDF::Query 1.x where nodes and statements were of the
same type as the underlying model (Redland nodes from a Redland model and
RDF::Core nodes from an RDF::Core model).
In the past, it was possible to execute a query and not know
what type of nodes were going to be returned, leading to overly verbose
code that required examining all nodes and statements with the bridge
object. This new API brings consistency to both the execution model and
client code, greatly simplifying interaction with query results.
- Binding Result Values
- Binding result values returned by calling
"$iterator->next" are now HASH
references (instead of ARRAY references), keyed by variable name. Where
prior code might use this code (modulo model definition and namespace
declarations):
my $sparql = 'SELECT ?name ?homepage WHERE { [ foaf:name ?name ; foaf:homepage ?homepage ] }';
my $query = RDF::Query->new( $sparql );
my $iterator = $query->execute( $model );
while (my $row = $iterator->()) {
my ($name, $homepage) = @$row;
# ...
}
New code using RDF::Query 2.000 and later should instead
use:
my $sparql = 'SELECT ?name ?homepage WHERE { [ foaf:name ?name ; foaf:homepage ?homepage ] }';
my $query = RDF::Query->new( $sparql );
my $iterator = $query->execute( $model );
while (my $row = $iterator->next) {
my $name = $row->{ name };
my $homepage = $row->{ homepage };
# ...
}
(Also notice the new method calling syntax for retrieving
rows.)
- "new ( $query, \%options )"
- Returns a new RDF::Query object for the specified
$query. The query language defaults to SPARQL 1.1,
but may be set specifically with the appropriate
%options value. Valid
%options are:
* lang
Specifies the query language. Acceptable values are
'sparql11', 'sparql', or 'rdql'.
* base_uri
Specifies the base URI used in parsing the query.
* update
A boolean value indicating whether update operations are
allowed during query execution.
* load_data
A boolean value indicating whether URIs used in SPARQL FROM
and FROM NAMED clauses should be dereferenced and the resulting RDF
content used to construct the dataset against which the query is
run.
- "get ( $model )"
- Executes the query using the specified model, and returns the first
matching row as a LIST of values.
- "prepare ( $model )"
- Prepares the query, constructing a query execution plan, and returns a
list containing ($plan, $context). To execute the
plan, call "execute_plan( $plan, $context
)".
- "execute ( $model, %args )"
- Executes the query using the specified RDF $model.
If called in a list context, returns an array of rows, otherwise returns
an RDF::Trine::Iterator object. The iterator returned may be an instance
of several subclasses of RDF::Trine::Iterator:
* A RDF::Trine::Iterator::Bindings object is returned for
query forms producing variable binding results (SELECT queries).
* A RDF::Trine::Iterator::Graph object is returned for query
forms producing in an RDF graph result (DESCRIBE and CONSTRUCT
queries).
* A RDF::Trine::Iterator::Boolean object is returned for query
forms producing a true/false result (ASK queries).
- "execute_plan ( $plan, $context )"
- Executes the query plan generated by the
"<prepare"> method using the
supplied RDF::Query::ExecutionContext object. Return value(s) are the same
as for the "<execute">
method.
- "prepare_with_named_graphs ( $model, @uris )"
- "execute_with_named_graphs ( $model, @uris )"
- Executes the query using the specified RDF $model,
loading the contents of the specified @uris into
named graphs immediately prior to matching the query. Otherwise, acts just
like "execute".
- "pattern"
- Returns the RDF::Query::Algebra::GroupGraphPattern algebra pattern for
this query.
- "is_update"
- "as_sparql"
- Returns the query as a string in the SPARQL syntax.
- "as_hash"
- Returns the query as a nested set of plain data structures (no
objects).
- "sse"
- Returns the query as a string in the SSE syntax.
- "dateparser"
- Returns the DateTime::Format::W3CDTF object associated with this query
object.
- "specifies_update_dataset"
- Returns true if the query specifies a custom update dataset via the WITH
or USING keywords, false otherwise.
- "add_function ( $uri, $function )"
- Associates the custom function $function (a CODE
reference) with the specified URI, allowing the function to be called by
query FILTERs.
- "supported_extensions"
- Returns a list of URLs representing extensions to SPARQL that are
supported by the query engine.
- "supported_functions"
- Returns a list URLs that may be used as functions in FILTER clauses (and
the SELECT clause if the SPARQL 1.1 parser is used).
- "add_computed_statement_generator ( $predicate => \&generator
)"
- Adds a statement generator for the given
$predicate to the query object. This statement
generator will be called as "$generator->(
$query, $model, \%bound, $s, $p, $o, $c )" and is expected to
return an RDF::Trine::Iterator::Graph object containing statements with
$predicate.
- "get_computed_statement_generators ( [ $predicate ] )"
- Returns an ARRAY reference of computed statement generator closures.
- "add_hook_once ( $hook_uri, $function, $token )"
- Calls "add_hook" adding the supplied
$function only once based on the
$token identifier. This may be useful if the only
code that is able to add a hook is called many times (in an extension
function, for example).
- "add_hook ( $hook_uri, $function )"
- Associates the custom function $function (a CODE
reference) with the RDF::Query code hook specified by
$uri. Each function that has been associated with
a particular hook will be called (in the order they were registered as
hooks) when the hook event occurs. See "Defined Hooks" for more
information.
- "parsed ()"
- Returns the parse tree.
- "model"
- Returns the RDF::Trine::Model object for this query.
- "useragent"
- Returns the LWP::UserAgent object used for retrieving web content.
- "log ( $key [, $value ] )"
- If no logger object is associated with this query object, does nothing.
Otherwise, return or set the corresponding value depending on whether a
$value is specified.
- "logger"
- Returns the logger object associated with this query object (if
present).
- "error ()"
- Returns the last error the parser experienced.
The following hook URIs are defined and may be used to extend the query engine
functionality using the "add_hook" method:
- http://kasei.us/code/rdf-query/hooks/post-create-model
- Called after loading all external files to a temporary model in queries
that use FROM and FROM NAMED.
Args: ( $query,
$model )
$query is the RDF::Query object.
$model is the RDF::Trine::Model object.
- http://kasei.us/code/rdf-query/hooks/post-execute
- Called immediately before returning a result iterator from the execute
method.
Args: ( $query,
$model, $iterator )
$query is the RDF::Query object.
$model is the RDF::Trine::Model object.
$iterator is a RDF::Trine::Iterator object.
<http://www.perlrdf.org/>
Gregory Todd Williams <gwilliams@cpan.org>
Copyright (c) 2005-2012 Gregory Todd Williams. This program is free software;
you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
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