This package contains utility functions to convert between the string-based and RDFJS representations of RDF terms, quads and triples.
If you are looking for a Turtle-based string syntax, have a look at RDF String Turtle
This allows for convenient and compact interaction with RDF terms and quads, as they can be serialized as plain JSON.
This string-based representation is based on the old triple representation of N3.js. Namely, quads are represented as follows:
{
subject: 'http://example.org/cartoons#Tom',
predicate: 'http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type',
object: 'http://example.org/cartoons#Cat'
graph: 'http://example.org/myGraph'
}
Different terms types in quads are represented as follows:
- URLs, URIs and IRIs are simple strings:
'http://example.org/cartoons#Tom'
- Literals are represented as double quoted strings:
'"Tom"'
,'"Tom"@en-gb'
,'"1"^^http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer'
- Variables are prefixed by
?
:'?variableName'
The following examples assume the following imports:
import * as RdfDataModel from "rdf-data-model";
import * as RdfString from "rdf-string";
Convert an RDFJS term to the string-based representation.
// Prints http://example.org
console.log(RdfString.termToString(RdfDataModel.namedNode('http://example.org')));
// Prints _:b1
console.log(RdfString.termToString(RdfDataModel.blankNode('b1')));
// Prints "abc"
console.log(RdfString.termToString(RdfDataModel.literal('abc')));
// Prints "abc"@en-us
console.log(RdfString.termToString(RdfDataModel.literal('abc', 'en-us')));
// Prints "abc"^^http://example.org/
console.log(RdfString.termToString(RdfDataModel.literal('abc', namedNode('http://example.org/'))));
// Prints ?v1
console.log(RdfString.termToString(RdfDataModel.variable('v1')));
// Prints empty string
console.log(RdfString.termToString(RdfDataModel.defaultGraph()));
Convert an string-based term to the RDFJS representation.
Optionally, a custom RDFJS DataFactory can be provided as second argument to create terms instead of the built-in DataFactory.
// Outputs a named node
RdfString.stringToTerm('http://example.org');
// Outputs a blank node
RdfString.stringToTerm('_:b1');
// Outputs a literal
RdfString.stringToTerm('"abc"');
// Outputs a literal with a language tag
RdfString.stringToTerm('"abc"@en-us');
// Outputs a literal with a datatype
RdfString.stringToTerm('"abc"^^http://example.org/');
// Outputs a variable
RdfString.stringToTerm('?v1');
// Outputs a default graph
RdfString.stringToTerm('');
Convert an RDFJS quad to a string-based quad.
// Prints { subject: 'http://example.org', predicate: 'http://example.org', object: '"abc"', graph: '' }
console.log(RdfString.quadToStringQuad(RdfDataModel.triple(
namedNode('http://example.org'),
namedNode('http://example.org'),
literal('abc'),
)));
Converts a string-based quad to an RDFJS quad.
Optionally, a custom RDFJS DataFactory can be provided as second argument to create quads and terms instead of the built-in DataFactory.
// Outputs a quad
RdfString.stringQuadToQuad({
subject: 'http://example.org',
predicate: 'http://example.org',
object: '"abc"',
graph: '',
});
This software is written by Ruben Taelman. These utility functions are inspired by the implementation of N3.js.
This code is released under the MIT license.