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ts-rdf-mapper

ts-rdf-mapper

Typescript RDF Turtle Serializer/Deserializer

Library written in typescript using reflect-metadata. Decorators are used to annotate classes and properties.

  1. Clone
  2. npm install
  3. npm run build-test

look in test folder for tests

Typescript Docs and Examples

Features

  • Map Typescript primitives to standard XML-Schema literals
  • Serialize Typescript Date objects with built-in ISO Date Serializer
  • Implement IRDFSerializer interface to serialize Date objects or primitives however you want
  • Serialize strings with a xsd datatype or a lang tag i.e 'Pineapple'@en, 'Ananas'@ru
  • Recursive data structures support
  • Inheritance Support
  • Serialize/Deserialize Blank Nodes
  • Serialize plain json objects by extending AbstractBNodeSerializer
  • Written with N3.js with typings provided by DefinitelyTyped

Examples And Usage

Decorators

RdfPrefixes

decorator specifies one or more RDF namespace prefixes in the format [key: string]: string. i.e

@RdfPrefixes({
    foaf: 'http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/',
    person: 'http://example.com/Person/'
})
class Person {}

RdfBean

OPTIONAL - Defines the type (xsd:type) of Resource

Example:

@RdfPrefixes({
  foaf: 'http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/',
  person: 'http://example.com/Person/'
})
@RdfBean('foaf:Person')
export class Person {
 @RdfSubject('person')
 public name: string;
}

const p = new Person();
p.name = 'John';
RdfMapper.serialize(p)

produces the following TURTLE:

@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/>.
@prefix person: <http://example.com/Person/>.
@prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#>.

person:John a foaf:Person;

@RdfBean should be present on the parent class for proper deserialization

RdfSubject

Optional - Resource Identifier. If this decorator is absent then the subject will be a Blank Node Example:

@RdfPrefixes({
  foaf: 'http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/',
  person: 'http://example.com/Person/'
})
@RdfBean('foaf:Person')
export class Person {
 @RdfSubject('person')
 public name: string;
}

const p = new Person();
p.name = 'John';
RdfMapper.serialize(p)

produces the following TURTLE:

@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/>.
@prefix person: <http://example.com/Person/>.
@prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#>.

person:John a foaf:Person;

or if @RdfSubject is not present on class Person:

@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/>.
@prefix person: <http://example.com/Person/>.
@prefix xsd: <http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#>.

_:b1 a foaf:Person;

RdfProperty

Used to annotate object properties. Can also be used to annotate typescript setters

Serialize

Let's take a simple example of Friend Has Friend

@RdfPrefixes({
    foaf: 'http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/',
    person: 'http://example.com/Person/'
})
@RdfBean('foaf:Person')
export class PersonHasFriend {
    @RdfSubject('person')
    public uuid: string;

    @RdfProperty({predicate: 'foaf:name', xsdType: XSDDataType.XSD_STRING})
    public name: string;

    @RdfProperty({predicate: 'foaf:knows', clazz: PersonHasFriend, inverseOfPredicate: 'foaf:knows'})
    public knows: PersonHasFriend;
}

Let's break it down. First we define prefixes in order to shorten the URI identifiers.

Next we will include an @RdfBean decorator. RdfBean is used to identify the xsd:type of the Resource. This property is optional.

Now onto @RdfSubject decorator. This decorator is used to create an URI identifier for your object. If this decorator is absent, the resulting resource will be a blank node. You can pass a namespace prefix name that we defined in @RdfPrefixes or a url. The @RdfSubject parameter and the variable value will be concatenated to create a resource identifier.

const antonPerson: PersonHasFriend = new PersonHasFriend();
antonPerson.uuid = 'Anton';
antonPerson.name = 'Anton S';

const johnDoePerson: PersonHasFriend = new PersonHasFriend();
johnDoePerson.uuid = 'John';
johnDoePerson.name = 'John Doe';
antonPerson.knows = johnDoePerson;

const r = RdfMapper.serialize(antonPerson);

which should produce the following TTL (TURTLE) output

person:John a foaf:Person;
    foaf:knows person:Anton;
    foaf:name "John Doe"^^xsd:string.
person:Anton a foaf:Person;
    foaf:name "Anton S"^^xsd:string;
    foaf:knows person:John.

We can see that Anton knows John, but also that John knows Anton even though we did not explicitly specify it.

@RdfProperty has a special inverseOfPredicate property which allows us to point backwards to the previous object.

Deserialize

See src/test/deserialize.spec.ts file for more examples.

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