/usr/share/perl5/RDF/TrineX/Functions.pm is in librdf-trinex-functions-perl 0.005-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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use 5.010;
use strict qw< vars subs >;
no warnings;
use utf8;
BEGIN {
$RDF::TrineX::Functions::AUTHORITY = 'cpan:TOBYINK';
$RDF::TrineX::Functions::VERSION = '0.005';
}
use Carp qw< croak >;
use IO::Detect 0.003 qw< is_filehandle is_filename is_fileuri >;
use PerlX::Maybe qw< maybe >;
use RDF::NS::Trine;
use RDF::Trine qw< store >;
use RDF::Trine::Namespace qw< rdf rdfs owl xsd >;
use Scalar::Util qw< blessed >;
use URI::file;
use Sub::Exporter -setup => {
exports => [
qw< curie iri blank variable literal statement store model parse >,
serialize => \&_build_serializer,
],
groups => {
nodes => [qw< curie iri blank literal variable >],
shortcuts => [
parse => { -as => 'rdf_parse' },
serialize => { -as => 'rdf_string' },
],
shortcuts_nodes => [
parse => { -as => 'rdf_parse' },
serialize => { -as => 'rdf_string' },
iri => { -as => 'rdf_resource' },
blank => { -as => 'rdf_blank' },
literal => { -as => 'rdf_literal' },
variable => { -as => 'rdf_variable' },
statement => { -as => 'rdf_statement' },
],
},
};
foreach my $nodetype (qw< iri blank variable literal >)
{
my $orig = $nodetype eq 'iri'
? sub { RDF::Trine::Node::Resource->new(@_) }
: RDF::Trine->can($nodetype);
my $sub;
$sub = sub
{
shift if blessed $_[0] && $_[0]->isa(__PACKAGE__);
return $sub->(@{$_[0]}) if ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY';
my $node = shift;
if (blessed($node) and $node->isa('RDF::Trine::Node'))
{
return $node;
}
if ($nodetype eq 'iri' and blessed($node) and $node->isa('URI'))
{
return $orig->("$node", @_);
}
elsif ($nodetype eq 'literal' and blessed($node) and $node->isa('URI'))
{
$_[1] //= $xsd->anyURI unless $_[0];
return $orig->("$node", @_);
}
if ($nodetype =~ m[^(iri|blank)$] and $node =~ /^_:(.+)$/)
{
return RDF::Trine::blank($1, @_);
}
if ($nodetype =~ m[^(variable|blank)$] and $node =~ /^\?(.+)$/)
{
return RDF::Trine::variable($1, @_);
}
$orig->("$node", @_);
};
*$nodetype = $sub;
}
sub new
{
my ($class, @args) = @_;
bless \@args, $class;
}
sub curie
{
shift if blessed $_[0] && $_[0]->isa(__PACKAGE__);
return curie(@{$_[0]}) if ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY';
my $node = shift;
if (blessed($node) and $node->isa('RDF::Trine::Node'))
{
return $node;
}
if (blessed($node) and $node->isa('URI'))
{
return RDF::Trine::iri("$node", @_);
}
if ($node =~ /^_:(.+)$/)
{
return RDF::Trine::blank($1, @_);
}
state $ns = RDF::NS::Trine->new('any');
$ns->URI($node);
}
sub statement
{
shift if blessed $_[0] && $_[0]->isa(__PACKAGE__);
return statement(@{$_[0]}) if ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY';
my (@nodes) = map {
if (blessed($_) and $_->isa('RDF::Trine::Node')) { $_ }
elsif (blessed($_) and $_->isa('URI')) { iri($_) }
else { literal($_) }
} @_;
(@nodes==4)
? RDF::Trine::Statement::Quad->new(@nodes)
: RDF::Trine::Statement->new(@nodes)
}
sub model
{
shift if blessed $_[0] && $_[0]->isa(__PACKAGE__);
return model(@{$_[0]}) if ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY';
my $store = shift;
return $store if blessed($store) && $store->isa('RDF::Trine::Model');
$store
? RDF::Trine::Model->new($store)
: RDF::Trine::Model->new()
}
sub parse
{
shift if blessed $_[0] && $_[0]->isa(__PACKAGE__);
return parse(@{$_[0]}) if ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY';
my ($thing, %opts) = @_;
my $model = delete($opts{into}) // delete($opts{model});
my $base = delete($opts{base});
my $parser = delete($opts{parser}) // delete($opts{type}) // delete($opts{as}) // delete($opts{using});
my $graph = delete($opts{graph}) // delete($opts{context});
# Normalise $graph.
#
$graph = iri($graph) if defined $graph;
if (blessed($thing) && $thing->isa('RDF::Trine::Store')
or blessed($thing) && $thing->isa('RDF::Trine::Model'))
{
return model($thing) unless $model;
$thing->as_stream->each(sub {
my ($s, $p, $o) = shift->nodes;
$model->add_statement(
$graph
? statement($s, $p, $o, $graph)
: statement($s, $p, $o)
);
});
return $model;
}
$model //= model();
return $model unless defined $thing;
# Normalise $parser. It should be a class name or blessed object.
# If undef, then 'RDF::Trine::Parser' class.
# If media type then, figure out correct parser.
# If format name then, figure out correct parser.
#
if (not $parser)
{ $parser = 'RDF::Trine::Parser' }
elsif (not blessed $parser and $parser =~ m{/} and $parser !~ m{^RDF/}i)
{ $parser = RDF::Trine::Parser->parser_by_media_type($parser)->new }
elsif (not blessed $parser)
{ $parser = RDF::Trine::Parser->new($parser) }
# Normalise $base. Accept RDF::Trine::Nodes.
#
if (blessed $base and $base->isa('RDF::Trine::Node::Resource'))
{
$base = $base->uri;
}
# Deal with $thing being a URI.
# "file://" is explicitly not handled here.
#
if (blessed($thing) && $thing->isa('URI')
or blessed($thing) && $thing->isa('RDF::Trine::Node::Resource') && ($thing = $thing->uri)
or !blessed($thing) && $thing =~ m{^(https?|ftp|file|data):\S+$})
{
if (is_fileuri $thing)
{
# Convert to a local path, and allow to fall through...
URI->new("$thing")->file;
}
elsif (not ref $parser and $parser eq 'RDF::Trine::Parser')
{
RDF::Trine::Parser->parse_url_into_model(
"$thing",
$model,
maybe context => $graph,
);
return $model;
}
else
{
# UA string consistent with RDF::Trine::Parser
my $ua = LWP::UserAgent->new(agent => "RDF::Trine/$RDF::Trine::VERSION");
my $resp = $ua->get("$thing");
$parser->parse_into_model(
("$base"//"$thing"),
$resp->decoded_content,
$model,
maybe context => $graph,
);
return $model;
}
}
# Deal with $thing being a filename.
#
if (is_filename $thing)
{
$base //= URI::file->new_abs("$thing");
$parser->parse_file_into_model(
"$base",
"$thing",
$model,
maybe context => $graph,
);
return $model;
}
croak "No base URI provided" unless $base;
# Deal with $thing being a filehandle (or something similar).
#
if (is_filehandle $thing)
{
$parser->parse_file_into_model(
"$base",
$thing,
$model,
maybe context => $graph,
);
return $model;
}
croak "No parser provided for parsing" unless blessed $parser;
$parser->parse_into_model(
"$base",
$thing,
$model,
maybe context => $graph,
);
return $model;
}
sub _build_serializer
{
my ($class, $name, $arg) = @_;
my $sub;
$sub = sub
{
shift if blessed $_[0] && $_[0]->isa(__PACKAGE__);
return $sub->(@{$_[0]}) if ref $_[0] eq 'ARRAY';
my ($data, %opts) = do {
(@_==2)
? ($_[0], as => $_[1])
: @_
};
my $ser = delete($opts{serializer})
// delete($opts{type})
// delete($opts{as})
// delete($opts{using})
// $arg->{type}
// $arg->{-type}
// 'Turtle';
my $file = delete($opts{to})
// delete($opts{file})
// delete($opts{output});
if (not blessed $ser)
{
$ser = RDF::Trine::Serializer->new($ser, %opts);
}
if (blessed $data and $data->isa('RDF::Trine::Iterator'))
{
return defined($file)
? $ser->serialize_iterator_to_file($file, $data)
: $ser->serialize_iterator_to_string($data);
}
return defined($file)
? $ser->serialize_model_to_file($file, $data)
: $ser->serialize_model_to_string($data);
}
}
*serialize = __PACKAGE__->_build_serializer(serialize => {});
__PACKAGE__
__END__
=head1 NAME
RDF::TrineX::Functions - some shortcut functions for RDF::Trine's object-oriented interface
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use RDF::TrineX::Functions -all;
my $model = model();
parse('/tmp/mydata.rdf', into => $model);
$model->add_statement(statement(
iri('http://example.com/'),
iri('http://purl.org/dc/terms/title'),
"An Example",
));
print RDF::Trine::Serializer
-> new('Turtle')
-> serialize_model_to_string($model);
=head1 DESCRIPTION
This is a replacement for the venerable RDF::TrineShortcuts. Not a
drop-in replacement. It has fewer features, fewer dependencies,
less hackishness, less magic and fewer places it can go wrong.
It uses Sub::Exporter, which allows exported functions to be renamed
easily:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions
parse => { -as => 'parse_rdf' };
=head2 Functions
=over
=item C<iri>, C<literal>, C<blank>, C<variable>
As per the similarly named functions exported by L<RDF::Trine> itself.
These are wrapped with a very tiny bit of DWIMmery. A blessed L<URI>
object passed to C<iri> will be handled properly; a blessed URI
object passed to C<literal> will default the datatype to xsd:anyURI.
A string starting with "_:" passed to either C<iri> or C<blank> will
correctly create a blank node. A string starting with "?" passed to
either C<blank> or C<variable> will correctly create a variable. If
any of them are passed an existing RDF::Trine::Node, it will be
passed through untouched.
Other than that, no magic.
=item C<< curie >>
Like C<iri> but passes strings through L<RDF::NS::Trine>.
=item C<< statement(@nodes) >>
As per the similarly named function exported by L<RDF::Trine> itself.
Again, a tiny bit of DWIMmery: blessed URI objects are passed through
C<iri> and unblessed scalars (i.e. strings) are assumed to be literals.
=item C<store>
As per the similarly named function exported by L<RDF::Trine> itself.
=item C<model>
Returns a new RDF::Trine::Model. May be passed a store as a parameter.
=item C<< parse($source, %options) >>
Parses the source and returns an RDF::Trine::Model. The source may be:
=over
=item * a URI
A string URI, blessed URI object or RDF::Trine::Node::Resource, which
will be retrieved and parsed.
=item * a file
A filehandle, L<Path::Class::File>, L<IO::All>, L<IO::Handle> object,
or the name of an existing file (i.e. a scalar string). The file will
be read and parsed.
Except in the case of L<Path::Class::File>, L<IO::All> and strings,
you need to tell the C<parse> function what parser to use, and what
base URI to use.
=item * a string
You need to tell the C<parse> function what parser to use, and what
base URI to use.
=item * a model or store
An existing model or store, which will just be returned as-is.
=item * undef
Returns an empty model.
=back
The C<parser> option can be used to provide a blessed L<RDF::Trine::Parser>
object to use; the C<type> option can be used instead to provide a media
type hint. The C<base> option provides the base URI. The C<model> option
can be used to tell this function to parse into an existing model rather
than returning a new one. The C<graph> option may be used to provide a graph
URI.
C<into> is an alias for C<model>; C<type>, C<using> and C<as> are
aliases for C<parser>; C<context> is an alias for C<graph>.
Examples:
my $model = parse('/tmp/data.ttl', as => 'Turtle');
my $data = iri('http://example.com/data.nt');
my $parser = RDF::Trine::Parser::NTriples->new;
my $model = model();
parse($data, using => $parser, into => $model);
=item C<< serialize($data, %options) >>
Serializes the data (which can be an RDF::Trine::Model or an
RDF::Trine::Iterator) and returns it as a string.
The C<serializer> option can be used to provide a blessed
L<RDF::Trine::Serializer> object to use; the C<type> option can be used
instead to provide a type hint. The C<output> option can be used to
provide a filehandle, IO::All, Path::Class::File or file name to
write to instead of returning the results as a string.
C<to> and C<file> are aliases for C<output>; C<type>, C<using> and C<as>
are aliases for C<serializer>.
Examples:
print serialize($model, as => 'Turtle');
my $file = Path::Class::File->new('/tmp/data.nt');
serialize($iterator, to => $file, as => 'NTriples');
=back
=head2 Array References
In addition to the above interface, each function supports being called with a
single arrayref argument. In those cases, the arrayref is dereferenced into an
array, and treated as a list of arguments. That is, the following are
equivalent:
foo($bar, $baz);
foo([$bar, $baz]);
This is handy if you're writing a module of your own and wish to accept some
RDF data:
sub my_method {
my ($self, $rdf, $foo) = @_;
$rdf = parse($rdf);
....
}
Your method can now be called like this:
$object->my_method($model, 'foo');
$object->my_method($url, 'foo');
$object->my_method(
[ $filehandle, as => 'Turtle', base => $uri ],
'foo',
);
=head2 Export
By default, nothing is exported. You need to request things:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions qw< iri literal blank statement model >;
Thanks to L<Sub::Exporter>, you can rename functions:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions
qw< literal statement model >,
blank => { -as => 'bnode' },
iri => { -as => 'resource' };
If you want to export everything, you can do:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions -all;
To export just the functions which generate RDF::Trine::Node objects:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions -nodes;
Or maybe even:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions -nodes => { -suffix => '_node' };
If you want to export something roughly compatible with the old
RDF::TrineShortcuts, then there's:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions -shortcuts;
When exporting the C<serialize> function you may set a default format:
use RDF::TrineX::Functions
serialize => { -type => 'NTriples' };
This will be used when C<serialize> is called with no explicit type given.
=head2 Pseudo-OO interface
=over
=item C<new>
This acts as a constructor, returning a new RDF::TrineX::Functions object.
=back
All the normal functions can be called as methods:
my $R = RDF::TrineX::Functions->new;
my $model = $R->model;
There's no real advantage to using this module as an object, but it can
help you avoid namespace pollution.
=head1 BUGS
Please report any bugs to
L<http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=RDF-TrineX-Functions>.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<RDF::Trine>, L<RDF::QueryX::Lazy>, L<RDF::NS>.
=head1 AUTHOR
Toby Inkster E<lt>tobyink@cpan.orgE<gt>.
=head1 COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Toby Inkster.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
=head1 DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
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