W3C

JSON-LD Syntax 1.0

A JSON Serialization for Linking Data

W3C Editor's Draft 25 December 2012

This version:
http://dvcs.w3.org/hg/json-ld/raw-file/default/spec/ED/json-ld-syntax/20121225/index.html
Latest published version:
http://www.w3.org/TR/json-ld-syntax/
Latest editor's draft:
http://dvcs.w3.org/hg/json-ld/raw-file/default/spec/latest/json-ld-syntax/index.html
Editors:
Manu Sporny, Digital Bazaar
Gregg Kellogg, Kellogg Associates
Markus Lanthaler, Graz University of Technology
Authors:
Manu Sporny, Digital Bazaar
Dave Longley, Digital Bazaar
Gregg Kellogg, Kellogg Associates
Markus Lanthaler, Graz University of Technology
Mark Birbeck, Backplane Ltd.

This document is also available in this non-normative format: diff to previous version


Abstract

JSON has proven to be a highly useful object serialization and messaging format. In an attempt to harmonize the representation of Linked Data in JSON, this specification outlines a common JSON representation format for expressing directed graphs; mixing both Linked Data and non-Linked Data in a single document.

Status of This Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.

This document has been under development for over 20 months in the JSON for Linking Data Community Group. The document has recently been transferred to the RDF Working Group for review, improvement, and publication along the Recommendation track. The specification has undergone significant development, review, and changes during the course of the last 20 months.

There are several independent interoperable implementations of this specification. There is a fairly complete test suite and a live JSON-LD editor that is capable of demonstrating the features described in this document. While development on implementations, the test suite and the live editor will continue, they are believed to be mature enough to be integrated into a non-production system at this point in time with the expectation that they could be used in a production system within the next year.

There are a number of ways that one may participate in the development of this specification:

This document was published by the RDF Working Group as an Editor's Draft. If you wish to make comments regarding this document, please send them to public-rdf-comments@w3.org (subscribe, archives). All feedback is welcome.

Publication as an Editor's Draft does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership. This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.

This document was produced by a group operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

This section is non-normative.

Linked Data is a technique for creating a network of inter-connected data across different documents and Web sites. In general, Linked Data has four properties: 1) it uses IRIs to name things; 2) it uses HTTP IRIs for those names; 3) the name IRIs, when dereferenced, provide more information about the name; and 4) the data expresses links to data on other Web sites. These properties allow data published on the Web to work much like Web pages do today. One can start at one piece of Linked Data, and follow the links to other pieces of data that are hosted on different sites across the Web.

JSON-LD is designed as a lightweight syntax to express Linked Data in JSON [RFC4627]. It is primarily intended to be a way to use Linked Data in Web-based programming environments. It is also useful when building interoperable Web services and when storing Linked Data in JSON-based storage engines. Since JSON-LD is 100% compatible with JSON the large number of JSON parsers and libraries available today can be reused. Additionally to all the features JSON provides, JSON-LD introduces:

Developers that require any of the facilities listed above or need to serialize an RDF graph or dataset [RDF-CONCEPTS] in a JSON-based syntax will find JSON-LD of interest. The syntax is designed to not disturb already deployed systems running on JSON, but provide a smooth upgrade path from JSON to JSON-LD.

1.1 How to Read this Document

This section is non-normative.

This document is a detailed specification for a serialization of Linked Data in JSON. The document is primarily intended for the following audiences:

This specification does not describe the programming interfaces for the JSON-LD Syntax. The specification that describes the programming interfaces for JSON-LD documents is the JSON-LD Application Programming Interface [JSON-LD-API].

To understand the basics in this specification you must first be familiar with JSON, which is detailed in [RFC4627].

2. Design Goals and Rationale

This section is non-normative.

A number of design goals were established before the creation of this markup language:

Simplicity
No extra processors or software libraries should be necessary to use JSON-LD in its most basic form. The language will provide developers with a very easy learning curve. Developers only need to know JSON and two keywords (@context and @id) to use the basic functionality in JSON-LD.
Compatibility
The JSON-LD markup must be 100% compatible with JSON. This ensures that all of the standard JSON libraries work seamlessly with JSON-LD documents.
Expressiveness
The syntax must be able to express directed graphs, which have been proven to be able to express almost every real world data model.
Terseness
The JSON-LD syntax must be very terse and human readable, requiring as little effort as possible from the developer.
Zero Edits, most of the time
JSON-LD must provide a mechanism that allows developers to reference contexts in responses using plain old JSON. This allows organizations that have already deployed large JSON-based infrastructure to use JSON-LD's features in a way that is not disruptive to their day-to-day operations and is transparent to their current customers. At times, mapping JSON to a graph representation can become difficult. In these instances, rather than having JSON-LD support an esoteric use case, we chose not to support the use case and support a simplified syntax instead. So, while Zero Edits is a design goal, it is not always possible without adding great complexity to the language.
One-pass Processing
JSON-LD supports one-pass processing, which results in a very small memory footprint when processing documents. For example, to expand a JSON-LD document from a compacted form, only one pass is required over the data.

3. Terminology

3.1 General Terminology

This document uses the following terms as defined in JSON [RFC4627]. Refer to the JSON Grammar section in [RFC4627] for formal definitions.

JSON object
An object structure is represented as a pair of curly brackets surrounding zero or more key-value pairs. A key is a string. A single colon comes after each key, separating the key from the value. A single comma separates a value from a following key.
array
An array structure is represented as square brackets surrounding zero or more values (or elements). Elements are separated by commas. In JSON, an array is an ordered sequence of zero or more values. While JSON-LD uses the same array representation as JSON, the collection is unordered by default. While order is preserved in regular JSON arrays, it is not in regular JSON-LD arrays unless specific markup is provided (see 6.9 Sets and Lists).
string
A string is a sequence of zero or more Unicode characters, wrapped in double quotes, using backslash escapes (if necessary). A character is represented as a single character string.
number
A number is similar to that used in most programming languages, except that the octal and hexadecimal formats are not used and that leading zeros are not allowed.
true and false
Values that are used to express one of two possible boolean states.
null
The null value. A key-value pair in the @context where the value, or the @id of the value, is null explicitly decouples a term's association with an IRI. A key-value pair in the body of a JSON-LD document whose value is null has the same meaning as if the key-value pair was not defined. If @value, @list, or @set is set to null in expanded form, then the entire JSON object is ignored.

3.2 Syntax Tokens and Keywords

JSON-LD specifies a number of syntax tokens and keywords that are a core part of the language:

@context
Used to define the short-hand names that are used throughout a JSON-LD document. These short-hand names are called terms and help developers to express specific identifiers in a compact manner. The @context keyword is described in detail in the section titled 5.1 The Context.
@id
Used to uniquely identify things that are being described in the document. This keyword is described in 5.4 Node Identifiers.
@value
Used to specify the data that is associated with a particular property in the graph. This keyword is described in 5.6 String Internationalization and 6.2 Typed Values.
@language
Used to specify the native language for a particular value or the default language of a JSON-LD document. This keyword is described in the section titled 5.6 String Internationalization.
@type
Used to set the data type of a node or typed value. This keyword is described in the section titled 6.2 Typed Values.
@container
Used to set the container of a particular value. This keyword is described in the section titled 6.9 Sets and Lists.
@list
Used to express an ordered set of data. This keyword is described in the section titled 6.9 Sets and Lists.
@set
Used to express an unordered set of data and to ensure that values are always represented as arrays. This keyword is described in the section titled 6.9 Sets and Lists.
@annotation
Used to specify that a container is used to index information and that processing should continue deeper into a JSON data structure. This keyword is described in the section titled 6.14 Data Annotations.
@vocab
Used to expand properties and values in @type with a common prefix IRI. This keyword is described in section 5.3 IRIs.
@graph
Used to explicitly label a JSON-LD graph. This keyword is described in 6.11 Named Graphs.
:
The separator for JSON keys and values that use compact IRIs.

For the avoidance of doubt, all keys, keywords, and values in JSON-LD are case-sensitive.

4. Conformance

The JSON-LD Syntax specification describes the conformance criteria for JSON-LD documents (relevant to authors and authoring tool implementors).

A JSON-LD document complies with this specification if it follows the normative statements for documents defined in sections 6.4 Referencing Contexts from JSON Documents and B. JSON-LD Grammar. For convenience, normative statements for documents are often phrased as statements on the properties of the document.

The key words must, must not, required, shall, shall not, should, should not, recommended, not recommended, may, and optional in this Recommendation have the meaning defined in [RFC2119].

5. Basic Concepts

5.1 The Context

In JSON-LD, a context is used to map terms, i.e., properties with associated values in an JSON document, to IRIs.

The Web uses IRIs for unambiguous identification. The idea is that these terms mean something that may be of use to other developers and that it is useful to give them an unambiguous identifier. That is, it is useful for terms to expand to IRIs so that developers don't accidentally step on each other's vocabulary terms and other resources. Furthermore, developers, and machines, are able to use this IRI (by plugging it directly into a web browser, for instance) to go to the term and get a definition of what the term means. This mechanism is analogous to the way we can use WordNet today to see the definition of words in the English language. Developers and machines need the same sort of definition of terms. IRIs provide a way to ensure that these terms are unambiguous. For example, the term name may map directly to the IRI http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name. This allows JSON-LD documents to be constructed using the common JSON practice of simple key-value pairs while ensuring that the data is useful outside of the page, API or database in which it resides.

Note that, to avoid forward-compatibility issues, terms starting with an @ character are to be avoided as they might be used as keywords in future versions of JSON-LD. Furthermore, the use of empty terms ("") is discouraged as not all programming languages are able to handle empty property names.

In a JSON-LD document, the mapping between terms and IRIs is typically collected in a context definition that would look something like this:

Example 1: Context definition
{
  "@context":
  {
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
    "depiction":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/depiction",
      "@type": "@id"
    },
    "homepage":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    },
  }
}

Let's assume that a developer starts with the following JSON document:

Example 2: Sample JSON document
{
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
  "depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}

The developer can add a single line to the JSON document above to reference the context and transform it into a JSON-LD document:

Example 3: Referencing a JSON-LD context
{
  "@context": "http://json-ld.org/contexts/person.jsonld",
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
  "depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}

The additions above transform the previous JSON document into a JSON document with added semantics because the @context specifies how the name, homepage, and depiction terms map to IRIs. Mapping those keys to IRIs gives the data global context. If two developers use the same IRI to describe a property, they are more than likely expressing the same concept. This allows both developers to re-use each others' data without having to agree to how their data will interoperate on a site-by-site basis. Contexts may also contain type, language or additional information for certain terms.

External JSON-LD context documents may contain extra information located outside of the @context key, such as documentation about the terms declared in the document. Information contained outside of the @context value is simply discarded when the document is used as an external JSON-LD context document (see 6.4 Referencing Contexts from JSON Documents).

Contexts may also be specified in-line. This ensures that JSON-LD documents can be understood even in the absence of a connection to the Web.

Example 4: In-line context definition
{
  "@context":
  {
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
    "depiction":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/depiction",
      "@type": "@id"
    },
    "homepage":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    },
  },
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
  "depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}

Contexts may be used at any time a node object is defined. In particular, a JSON-LD document may define more than one context, as in the following example:

Example 5: Multiple separate contexts
[
  {
    "@context": "http://example.org/contexts/person.jsonld",
    "name": "Manu Sporny",
    "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
    "depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
  },
  {
    "@context": "http://example.org/contexts/place.jsonld",
    "name": "The Empire State Building",
    "description": "The Empire State Building is a 102-story landmark in New York City.",
    "geo": {
      "latitude": "40.75",
      "longitude": "73.98"
    }
  }
]

This is useful when an author would like to use an existing context and add application-specific terms to the existing context. Duplicate context terms are overridden using a last-defined-overrides mechanism.

Example 6: Scoped contexts within node objects
{
  "@context":
  {
    "name": "http://example.com/person#name",
    "details": "http://example.com/person#details"
  },
  "name": "Markus Lanthaler",
  ...
  "details":
  {
    "@context": {
      "name": "http://example.com/organization#name"
    },
    "name": "Graz University of Technology"
  }
}

In the example above, the name prefix is overridden in the more deeply nested details structure. Note that this is rarely a good authoring practice and is typically used when there exist legacy applications that depend on the specific structure of the JSON object. If a term is re-defined within a context, all previous rules associated with the previous definition are removed. If that term is re-defined to null, the term is effectively removed from the list of terms defined in the active context.

A node object may specify multiple contexts, using an array, processed in order. The set of contexts defined within a specific node object are referred to as local contexts. Setting the context to null effectively resets the active context to an empty context. The active context refers to the accumulation of local contexts that are in scope at a specific point within the document. The following example specifies an external context and then layers a local context on top of the external context:

Example 7: Combining external and local contexts
{
  "@context": [
    "http://json-ld.org/contexts/person.jsonld",
    {
      "pic": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/depiction"
    }
  ],
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
  "pic": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}
Note

To ensure the best possible performance, it is a best practice to put the context definition at the top of the JSON-LD document. If it isn't listed first, processors have to save each key-value pair until the context is processed. This creates a memory and complexity burden for certain types of low-memory footprint JSON-LD processors.

5.2 From JSON to JSON-LD

If a set of terms such as, name, homepage, and depiction, are defined in a context, and that context is used to resolve the names in JSON objects, machines are able to automatically expand the terms to something unambiguous like this:

Example 8: Expanded terms
{
  "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name": "Manu Sporny",
  "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org"
  "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}

Doing this allows JSON to be unambiguously machine-readable without requiring developers to drastically change their workflow. A JSON object used to define property values of a node is called a node object.

Note

The example above does not use the @id keyword to identify the node being described above. This type of node is called a blank node. It is advised that all node objects in JSON-LD are identified by IRIs via the @id keyword unless the data is not intended to be linked to from other data sets.

5.3 IRIs

IRIs (Internationalized Resource Identifiers) are fundamental to Linked Data as that is how most nodes and properties are identified. IRIs can be expressed in a variety of different ways in JSON-LD:

  1. Except within a context definition, terms in the key position in a JSON object that have a mapping in the active context expand to an IRI. If there's a @vocab mapping in the active context also terms without an explicit mapping in the active context are expanded to an IRI.
  2. An IRI is generated for the string value specified using @id or @type.
  3. An IRI is generated for the string value of any key for which there are coercion rules in effect that identify the value as an @id.

IRIs may be represented as an absolute IRI or a relative IRI.

An absolute IRI is defined in [RFC3987] containing a scheme along with path and optional query and fragment segments. A relative IRI is an IRI that is relative to some other absolute IRI. In JSON-LD all relative IRIs are resolved relative to the base IRI associated with the document (typically, the directory that contains the document or the document itself).

IRIs can be expressed directly in the key position like so:

Example 9: IRI as a key
{
...
  "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name": "Manu Sporny",
...
}

In the example above, the key http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name is interpreted as an IRI because it contains a colon (:) and the 'http' prefix does not exist in the context.

Term expansion occurs for IRIs if the value matches a term defined within the active context:

Example 10: Term expansion from context definition
{
  "@context":
  {
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name"
...
  },
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "status": "trollin'",
...
}

Terms are case sensitive.

JSON keys that do not expand to an absolute IRI are ignored, or removed in some cases, by the [JSON-LD-API]. However, JSON keys that do not include a mapping in the context are still considered valid expressions in JSON-LD documents - the keys just don't expand to unambiguous identifiers.

Prefixes are expanded when the form of the value is a compact IRI represented as a prefix:suffix combination, and the prefix matches a term defined within the active context:

Example 11: Prefix expansion
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/"
...
  },
  "foaf:name": "Manu Sporny",
...
}

foaf:name above will automatically expand out to the IRI http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name. See 6.1 Compact IRIs for more details.

It is often common that all types and properties come from the same vocabulary. JSON-LD's @vocab keyword allows to set a common prefix to be used for all properties and types that neither match a term nor a compact IRI or an absolute IRI (i.e., do not contain a colon).

Example 12: Using a common vocabulary prefix
{
  "@context": {
    "@vocab": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/1.0/"
  },
  "@type": "Person",
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
}

An IRI is generated when a JSON object is used in the value position that contains an @id keyword:

Example 13: Expanded IRI definition
{
...
  "homepage": { "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org" }
...
}

Specifying a JSON object with an @id key is used to identify that node using an IRI. When the object has only the @id, it is called a node object. This facility may also be used to link to another node object using a mechanism called embedding, which is covered in the section titled 6.10 Embedding.

If type coercion rules are specified in the @context for a particular term or property IRI, an IRI is generated:

Example 14: Type coercion
{
  "@context":
  {
    ...
    "homepage":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    }
    ...
  }
...
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
...
}

In the example above, even though the value http://manu.sporny.org/ is expressed as a JSON string, the type coercion rules will transform the value into an IRI when generating the JSON-LD graph.

5.4 Node Identifiers

To be able to externally reference nodes in a graph, it is important that each node has an unambiguous identifier. IRIs are a fundamental concept of Linked Data, and nodes should have a de-referencable identifier used to name and locate them. For nodes to be truly linked, de-referencing the identifier should result in a representation of that node (for example, using a URL to retrieve a web page). Associating an IRI with a node tells an application that the returned document contains a description of the node requested.

JSON-LD documents may also contain descriptions of other nodes, so it is necessary to be able to uniquely identify each node which may be externally referenced.

The node of a JSON object is identified using the @id keyword:

Example 15: Identifying a node
{
  "@context":
  {
    ...
    "homepage":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    }
    ...
  },
  "@id": "http://example.org/people#joebob",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
...
}

The example above contains a node object identified by the IRI http://example.org/people#joebob.

Once defined, the node's unique identifier can be used to refer to it from other parts of the document or from external documents, using a node object that only contains an @id key:

Example 16: Referencing a node using its unique identifier
{
  "@context": ...,
  "@graph": [
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/library",
      "@type": "ex:Library",
      "ex:contains": {"@id": "http://example.org/library/the-republic"}
    }, {
      "@id": "http://example.org/library/the-republic",
      "@type": "ex:Book",
      "dc:creator": "Plato",
      "dc:title": "The Republic",
      "ex:contains": {"@id": "http://example.org/library/the-republic#introduction"}
    }, {
      "@id": "http://example.org/library/the-republic#introduction",
      "@type": "ex:Chapter",
      "dc:description": "An introductory chapter on The Republic.",
      "dc:title": "The Introduction"
    }
  ]
}
}

5.5 Specifying the Type

The type of a particular node can be specified using the @type keyword. In Linked Data, types are uniquely identified with an IRI.

Example 17: Specifying the type for a node
{
...
  "@id": "http://example.org/people#joebob",
  "@type": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/Person",
...
}

A node can be assigned more than one type by using the following markup pattern:

Example 18: Specifying multiple types for a node
{
...
  "@id": "http://example.org/places#BrewEats",
  "@type": ["http://schema.org/Restaurant", "http://schema.org/Brewery"]
...
}

The value of a @type key may also be a term defined in the active context:

Example 19: Using a term to specify the type
{
  "@context": "http://json-ld.org/contexts/person.jsonld",
  "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public",
  "@type": "Person",
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
  "depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}

5.6 String Internationalization

At times, it is important to annotate a string with its language. In JSON-LD this is possible in a variety of ways. Firstly, it is possible to define a default language for a JSON-LD document by setting the @language key in the @context or in a term definition:

Example 20: Setting the default language of a JSON-LD document
{
  "@context":
  {
    ...
    "@language": "ja"
  },
  "name": "花澄",
  "occupation": "科学者"
}

The example above would associate the ja language code with the two strings 花澄 and 科学者. Languages codes are defined in [BCP47].

It is possible to override the default language by using an expanded value:

Example 21: Overriding default language using an expanded value
{
  "@context": {
    ...
    "@language": "ja"
  },
  "name": "花澄",
  "occupation": {
    "@value": "Scientist",
    "@language": "en"
  }
}

It is also possible to override the default language or specify a plain value by omitting the @language tag or setting it to null when expressing the expanded value:

Example 22: Removing language information using an expanded value
{
  "@context": {
    ...
    "@language": "ja"
  },
  "name": {
    "@value": "Frank"
  },
  "occupation":  {
    "@value": "Ninja",
    "@language": "en"
  },
  "speciality": "手裏剣"
}

Please note that language associations can only be applied to plain literal strings. That is, typed values or values that are subject to 6.6 Type Coercion cannot be language tagged.

To clear the default language for a subtree, @language can be set to null in a local context as follows:

Example 23: Clearing default language
{
  "@context": {
    ...
    "@language": "ja"
  },
  "name": "花澄",
  "details": {
    "@context": {
      "@language": null
    },
    "occupation": "Ninja"
  }
}
Note

JSON-LD allows one to associate language information with terms. See 6.5 Expanded Term Definition for more details.

5.7 JSON-LD Syntax

A JSON-LD document is first, and foremost, a JSON document (as defined in [RFC4627]). However, JSON-LD describes a specific syntax to use for expressing Linked Data. This includes the use of specific keywords, as identified in 3.2 Syntax Tokens and Keywords for expressing node objects, values, and the context. See B. JSON-LD Grammar for authoring guidelines.

6. Advanced Concepts

This section is normative.

JSON-LD has a number of features that provide functionality above and beyond the core functionality described above. The following section describes this advanced functionality in more detail.

6.1 Compact IRIs

Terms in Linked Data documents may draw from a number of different vocabularies. At times, declaring every single term that a document uses can require the developer to declare tens, if not hundreds of potential vocabulary terms that are used across an application. This is a concern for at least two reasons: the first is the cognitive load on the developer of remembering all of the terms, and the second is the serialized size of the context if it is specified inline. In order to address these issues, the concept of a compact IRI is introduced.

A compact IRI is a way of expressing an IRI using a prefix and suffix separated by a colon (:) which is similar to the CURIE Syntax in [RDFA-CORE]. The prefix is a term taken from the active context and is a short string identifying a particular IRI in a JSON-LD document. For example, the prefix foaf may be used as a short hand for the Friend-of-a-Friend vocabulary, which is identified using the IRI http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/. A developer may append any of the FOAF vocabulary terms to the end of the prefix to specify a short-hand version of the absolute IRI for the vocabulary term. For example, foaf:name would be expanded out to the IRI http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name. Instead of having to remember and type out the entire IRI, the developer can instead use the prefix in their JSON-LD markup.

Terms are interpreted as compact IRIs if they contain at least one colon and the first colon is not followed by two slashes (//, as in http://example.com). To generate the full IRI, the value is first split into a prefix and suffix at the first occurrence of a colon (:). If the active context contains a term mapping for prefix, an IRI is generated by prepending the mapped prefix to the (possibly empty) suffix using textual concatenation. If no prefix mapping is defined, the value is interpreted as an absolute IRI. If the prefix is an underscore (_), the IRI remains unchanged.

Consider the following example:

Example 24: Compact IRIs
{
  "@context":
  {
    "dc": "http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/",
    "ex": "http://example.org/vocab#"
  },
  "@id": "http://example.org/library",
  "@type": "ex:Library",
  "ex:contains":
  {
    "@id": "http://example.org/library/the-republic",
    "@type": "ex:Book",
    "dc:creator": "Plato",
    "dc:title": "The Republic",
    "ex:contains":
    {
      "@id": "http://example.org/library/the-republic#introduction",
      "@type": "ex:Chapter",
      "dc:description": "An introductory chapter on The Republic.",
      "dc:title": "The Introduction"
    }
  }
}

In this example, two different vocabularies are referred to using prefixes. Those prefixes are then used as type and property values using the compact IRI prefix:suffix notation.

It's also possible to use compact IRIs within the context as shown in the following example:

Example 25: Using vocabularies
{
  "@context":
  {
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#",
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/",
    "foaf:homepage": { "@type": "@id" },
    "picture": { "@id": "foaf:depiction", "@type": "@id" }
  },
  "@id": "http://me.markus-lanthaler.com/",
  "@type": "foaf:Person",
  "foaf:name": "Markus Lanthaler",
  "foaf:homepage": "http://www.markus-lanthaler.com/",
  "picture": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/markuslanthaler"
}

6.2 Typed Values

A value with an associated type, also known as a typed value, is indicated by associating a value with an IRI which indicates the value's type. Typed values may be expressed in JSON-LD in three ways:

  1. By utilizing the @type keyword when defining a term within a @context section.
  2. By utilizing an expanded typed value.
  3. By using a native JSON type such as number, true, or false.

The first example uses the @type keyword to associate a type with a particular term in the @context:

Example 26: Expanded term definition with type coercion
{
  "@context":
  {
    "modified":
    {
      "@id": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/modified",
      "@type": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime"
    }
  },
...
  "modified": "2010-05-29T14:17:39+02:00",
...
}

The modified key's value above is automatically type coerced to a datetime value because of the information specified in the @context.

The second example uses the expanded form of setting the type information in the body of a JSON-LD document:

Example 27: Expanded value with type
{
  "@context":
  {
    "modified":
    {
      "@id": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/modified"
    }
  },
...
  "modified":
  {
    "@value": "2010-05-29T14:17:39+02:00",
    "@type": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime"
  }
...
}

Both examples above would generate the value 2010-05-29T14:17:39+02:00 with the type http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime. Note that it is also possible to use a term or a compact IRI to express the value of a type.

The @type keyword is also used to associate a type with a node. The concept of a node type and a value type are different. This is similar to object-oriented programming languages where both scalar and structured types use the same class inheritance mechanism, even though scalar types and structured types are inherently different.

Example 28: Example demonstrating the context-sensitivity for @type
{
...
  "@id": "http://example.org/posts#TripToWestVirginia",
  "@type": "http://schema.org/BlogPosting",
  "modified":
  {
    "@value": "2010-05-29T14:17:39+02:00",
    "@type": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime"
  }
...
}

The first use of @type associates a node type (http://schema.org/BlogPosting) with the node, which is expressed using the @id keyword. The second use of @type associates a value type (http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime) with the value expressed using the @value keyword. As a general rule, when @value and @type are used in the same JSON object, the @type keyword is expressing a value type. Otherwise, the @type keyword is expressing a node type.

6.3 Language-tagged Strings

A string with an associated language, also known as a language-tagged string, is indicated by associating a string with a language code as defined in [BCP47]. Language-tagged strings may be expressed in JSON-LD in four ways:

  1. By defining a global language using the @language keyword within a @context section.
  2. By utilizing the @language keyword when defining a term within a @context section.
  3. By utilizing an expanded language-tagged string.
  4. By utilizing a language map, provided the underlying term is defined with a @container keyword whose value is @language within a @context section.

The first example uses the @language keyword to associate a type with a particular term in the @context:

Example 29: Expanded term definition with language coercion
{
  "@context":
  {
    "title":
    {
      "@id": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title",
      "@language": "en"
    }
  },
...
  "title": "JSON-LD Syntax",
...
}

The modified key's value above is automatically language coerced to a English value because of the information specified in the @context.

The second example uses the expanded form of setting the language information in the body of a JSON-LD document:

Example 30: Expanded value with language
{
  "@context":
  {
    "title":
    {
      "@id": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title"
    }
  },
...
  "title":
  {
    "@value": "JSON-LD Syntax",
    "@language": "en"
  }
...
}

Both examples above would generate the value JSON-LD Syntax tagged with the language en; which is the [BCP47] code for the English language.

Systems that support multiple languages often need to express data values in each language. Typically, such systems also try to ensure that developers have a programatically easy way to navigate the datastructures for the language-specific data. In this case, language maps may be utilized.

Example 31: Language map expressing a property in three languages
{
  "@context":
  {
    "title":
    {
      "@id": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title",
      "@container": "@language"
    }
  },
...
  "title":
  {
    "en": "JSON-LD Syntax",
    "ru": "JSON-LD Синтаксис",
    "ja": "JSON-LDの構文"
  }
...
}

In the example above, the title is expressed in three languages; English, Russian, and Japanese. To access the data above in a programming language supporting dot-notation accessors for object properties, a developer may use the property.language pattern. For example, to access the Japanese version of the title, a developer would use the following code snippet: obj.title.ja.

6.4 Referencing Contexts from JSON Documents

Ordinary JSON documents can be transformed into JSON-LD documents by referencing to an external JSON-LD context in an HTTP Link Header. Doing this allows JSON to be unambiguously machine-readable without requiring developers to drastically change their workflow and provides an upgrade path for existing infrastructure without breaking existing clients that rely on the application/json media type.

In order to use an external context with an ordinary JSON document, an author must specify an IRI to a valid JSON-LD document in an HTTP Link Header [RFC5988] using the http://www.w3.org/ns/json-ld#context link relation. The referenced document must have a top-level node object. The @context subtree within that object is added to the top-level node object of the referencing document. If an array is at the top-level of the referencing document and its items are node objects, the @context subtree is added to all array items. All extra information located outside of the @context subtree in the referenced document must be discarded.

The following example demonstrates the use of an external context with an ordinary JSON document:

Example 32: Specifing context through HTTP header
GET /ordinary-json-document.json HTTP/1.1
Host: example.com
Accept: application/ld+json,application/json,*/*;q=0.1

====================================

HTTP/1.0 200 OK
...
Content-Type: application/json
Link: <http://json-ld.org/contexts/person.jsonld>; rel="http://www.w3.org/ns/json-ld#context"; type="application/ld+json"

{
  "name": "Markus Lanthaler",
  "homepage": "http://www.markus-lanthaler.com/",
  "depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/markuslanthaler"
}

Please note that JSON-LD documents served with the application/ld+json media type must have all context information, including references to external contexts, within the body of the document. Contexts linked via a http://www.w3.org/ns/json-ld#context HTTP Link Header must be ignored for such documents.

6.5 Expanded Term Definition

Within a context definition, terms may be defined using an expanded term definition to allow for additional information associated with the term to be specified (see also 6.6 Type Coercion and 6.9 Sets and Lists).

Instead of using a string representation of an IRI, the IRI may be specified using a JSON object having an @id key, and a term, a compact IRI, or an absolute IRI as value.

Example 33: Expanded term definition
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": { "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/" },
    "name": { "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name" },
    "homepage": { "@id": "foaf:homepage" },
    "depiction": { "@id": "foaf:depiction" }
  },
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
  "depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}

This allows additional information to be associated with the term. This may be used for 6.6 Type Coercion, 6.9 Sets and Lists, or to associate language information with a term as shown in the following example:

Example 34: Expanded term definition with language
{
  "@context": {
    ...
    "ex": "http://example.com/",
    "@language": "ja",
    "name": { "@id": "ex:name", "@language": null },
    "occupation": { "@id": "ex:occupation" },
    "occupation_en": { "@id": "ex:occupation", "@language": "en" },
    "occupation_cs": { "@id": "ex:occupation", "@language": "cs" }
  },
  "name": "Yagyū Muneyoshi",
  "occupation": "忍者",
  "occupation_en": "Ninja",
  "occupation_cs": "Nindža",
  ...
}

The example above would associate 忍者 with the specified default language code ja, Ninja with the language code en, and Nindža with the language code cs. The value of name, Yagyū Muneyoshi wouldn't be associated with any language code since @language was reset to null in the expanded term definition.

Expanded terms may also be defined using compact IRIs or absolute IRIs as keys. If the definition does not include an @id key, the expanded IRI is determined by performing expansion of the key within the current active context. This mechanism is mainly used to associate type or language information with a compact IRI or an absolute IRI.

Note

While it is possible to define a compact IRI, or an absolute IRI to expand to some other unrelated IRI (for example, foaf:name expanding to http://example.org/unrelated#species), such usage is strongly discouraged.

6.6 Type Coercion

JSON-LD supports the coercion of values to particular data types. Type coercion allows someone deploying JSON-LD to coerce the incoming or outgoing values to the proper data type based on a mapping of data type IRIs to terms. Using type coercion, value representation is preserved without requiring the data type to be specified with each piece of data.

Type coercion is specified within an 6.5 Expanded Term Definition using the @type key. The value of this key expands to an IRI. Alternatively, the keyword @id may be used as value to indicate that within the body of a JSON-LD document, a string value of a term coerced to @id is to be interpreted as an IRI.

Terms or compact IRIs used as the value of a @type key may be defined within the same context. This means that one may specify a term like xsd and then use xsd:integer within the same context definition.

The example below demonstrates how a JSON-LD author can coerce values to typed values, IRIs and lists.

Example 35: Expanded term definition with types
{
  "@context":
  {
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#",
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
    "age":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/age",
      "@type": "xsd:integer"
    },
    "homepage":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id",
      "@container": "@list"
    }
  },
  "@id": "http://example.com/people#john",
  "name": "John Smith",
  "age": "41",
  "homepage":
  [
    "http://personal.example.org/",
    "http://work.example.com/jsmith/"
  ]
}

The markup shown above would generate the following data. The data has no inherent order except for the values the http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage property which represent an ordered list.

Subject Property Object Datatype
http://example.com/people#john http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name John Smith
http://example.com/people#john http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/age 41 http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer
http://example.com/people#john http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage http://personal.example.org/
http://work.example.com/jsmith/

Terms may also be defined using absolute IRIs or compact IRIs. This allows coercion rules to be applied to keys which are not represented as a simple term. For example:

Example 36: Term definitions using compact and absolute IRIs
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/",
    "foaf:age":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/age",
      "@type": "xsd:integer"
    },
    "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage":
    {
      "@type": "@id"
    }
  },
  "foaf:name": "John Smith",
  "foaf:age": "41",
  "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage":
  [
    "http://personal.example.org/",
    "http://work.example.com/jsmith/"
  ]
}

In this case the @id definition in the term definition is optional, but if it does exist, the compact IRI or IRI is treated as a term (not a prefix:suffix construct) so that the actual definition of a prefix becomes unnecessary. Type coercion is performed using the unexpanded value of the key, which has to match exactly an entry in the active context.

Note

Keys in the context are treated as terms for the purpose of expansion and value coercion. At times, this may result in multiple representations for the same expanded IRI. For example, one could specify that dog and cat both expanded to http://example.com/vocab#animal. Doing this could be useful for establishing different type coercion or language specification rules. It also allows a compact IRI (or even an absolute IRI) to be defined as something else entirely. For example, one could specify that the term http://example.org/zoo should expand to http://example.org/river, but this usage is discouraged because it would lead to a great deal of confusion among developers attempting to understand the JSON-LD document.

6.7 Property Generators

At times, an author may find that they need to express the same value for multiple properties. The simplest approach to accomplish this goal would be to do the following:

Example 37: Verbose expression of multiple properties with the same value
{
  "@context":
  {
    "title1": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title",
    "title2": "http://schema.org/name",
    "title3": "http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label"
  },
  "@id": "http://example.com/book",
  "title1": "The Count of Monte Cristo",
  "title2": "The Count of Monte Cristo",
  "title3": "The Count of Monte Cristo"
}

Unfortunately, the approach above produces redundant data and would become a publishing burden for large data sets. In these situations, the author may use a property generator to express a term that maps to multiple properties in the JSON-LD graph. This method can be accomplished by using the following markup pattern:

Example 38: Generating multiple properties using a single term
{
  "@context":
  {
    "title": { "@id": [ "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title",
                        "http://schema.org/name",
                        "http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label" ] }
  },
  "@id": "http://example.com/book",
  "title": "The Count of Monte Cristo"
}

While the term above is only used once outside of the @context, the document above is equivalent to the following:

Subject Property Object
http://example.com/book http://purl.org/dc/terms/title The Count of Monte Cristo
http://example.com/book http://schema.org/name The Count of Monte Cristo
http://example.com/book http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label The Count of Monte Cristo

6.8 IRI Expansion Within a Context

In general, normal IRI expansion rules apply anywhere an IRI is expected (see 5.3 IRIs). Within a context definition, this can mean that terms defined within the context may also be used within that context as long as there are no circular dependencies. For example, it is common to use the xsd namespace when defining typed values:

Example 39: IRI expansion within a context
{
  "@context":
  {
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#",
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
    "age":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/age",
      "@type": "xsd:integer"
    },
    "homepage":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    }
  },
  ...
}

In this example, the xsd term is defined and used as a prefix for the @type coercion of the age property.

Terms may also be used when defining the IRI of another term:

Example 40: Using a term to define the IRI of another term within a context
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/",
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#",
    "name": "foaf:name",
    "age":
    {
      "@id": "foaf:age",
      "@type": "xsd:integer"
    },
    "homepage":
    {
      "@id": "foaf:homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    }
  },
  ...
}

Compact IRIs and IRIs may be used on the left-hand side of a term definition.

Example 41: Using a compact IRI as a term
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/",
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#",
    "name": "foaf:name",
    "foaf:age":
    {
      "@type": "xsd:integer"
    },
    "foaf:homepage":
    {
      "@type": "@id"
    }
  },
  ...
}

In this example, the compact IRI form is used in two different ways. In the first approach, foaf:age declares both the IRI for the term (using short-form) as well as the @type associated with the term. In the second approach, only the @type associated with the term is specified. The full IRI for foaf:homepage is determined by looking up the foaf prefix in the context.

Absolute IRIs may also be used in the key position in a context:

Example 42: Associating context definitions with absolute IRIs
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/",
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#",
    "name": "foaf:name",
    "foaf:age":
    {
      "@id": "foaf:age",
      "@type": "xsd:integer"
    },
    "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage":
    {
      "@type": "@id"
    }
  },
  ...
}

In order for the absolute IRI to match above, the absolute IRI needs to be used in the JSON-LD document. Also note that foaf:homepage will not use the { "@type": "@id" } declaration because foaf:homepage is not the same as http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage. That is, terms are looked up in a context using direct string comparison before the prefix lookup mechanism is applied.

The only exception for using terms in the context is that circular definitions are not allowed. That is, a definition of term-1 cannot depend on the definition of term-2 if term-2 also depends on term-1. For example, the following context definition is illegal:

Example 43: Illegal circular definition of terms within a context
{
  "@context":
  {
    "term1": "term2:foo",
    "term2": "term1:bar"
  },
  ...
}

6.9 Sets and Lists

A JSON-LD author can express multiple values in a compact way by using arrays. Since graphs do not describe ordering for links between nodes, arrays in JSON-LD do not provide an ordering of the contained elements by default. This is exactly the opposite from regular JSON arrays, which are ordered by default. For example, consider the following simple document:

Example 44: Multiple values with no inherent order
{
...
  "@id": "http://example.org/people#joebob",
  "nick": [ "joe", "bob", "jaybee" ],
...
}

The markup shown above would result in the following data being generated, each relating the node to an individual value, with no inherent order:

Subject Property Object
http://example.org/people#joebob http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/nick joe
http://example.org/people#joebob http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/nick bob
http://example.org/people#joebob http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/nick jaybee

Multiple values may also be expressed using the expanded form:

Example 45: Using an expanded form to set multiple values
{
  "@id": "http://example.org/articles/8",
  "dc:title": 
  [
    {
      "@value": "Das Kapital",
      "@language": "de"
    },
    {
      "@value": "Capital",
      "@language": "en"
    }
  ]
}

The markup shown above would generate the following data, again with no inherent order:

Subject Property Object Language
http://example.org/articles/8 http://purl.org/dc/terms/title Das Kapital de
http://example.org/articles/8 http://purl.org/dc/terms/title Capital en

As the notion of ordered collections is rather important in data modeling, it is useful to have specific language support. In JSON-LD, a list may be represented using the @list keyword as follows:

Example 46: An ordered collection of values in JSON-LD
{
...
  "@id": "http://example.org/people#joebob",
  "foaf:nick":
  {
    "@list": [ "joe", "bob", "jaybee" ]
  },
...
}

This describes the use of this array as being ordered, and order is maintained when processing a document. If every use of a given multi-valued property is a list, this may be abbreviated by setting @container to @list in the context:

Example 47: Specifying that a collection is ordered in the context
{
  "@context":
  {
    ...
    "nick":
    {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/nick",
      "@container": "@list"
    }
  },
...
  "@id": "http://example.org/people#joebob",
  "nick": [ "joe", "bob", "jaybee" ],
...
}
Note

List of lists are not allowed in this version of JSON-LD. This decision was made due to the extreme amount of added complexity when processing lists of lists.

Similarly to @list, there exists the keyword @set to describe unordered sets. While its use in the body of a JSON-LD document represents just syntactic sugar optimized away when processing the document, it is very helpful when used within the context of a document. Values of terms associated with a @set or @list container are always represented in the form of an array - even if there is just a single value that would otherwise be optimized to a non-array form in a 6.17 Compact Document Form. This makes post-processing of the data easier as the data is always in array form, even if the array only contains a single value.

Note

The use of @container in the body of a JSON-LD document has no meaning and is not allowed by the JSON-LD grammar (see B. JSON-LD Grammar).

6.10 Embedding

Embedding is a JSON-LD feature that allows an author to use node objects as property values. This is a commonly used mechanism for creating a parent-child relationship between two nodes.

The example shows two nodes related by a property from the first node:

Example 48: Embedding a node object as property value of another node object
{
...
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "knows":
  {
    "@type": "Person",
    "name": "Gregg Kellogg",
  }
...
}

A node object, like the one used above, may be used in any value position in the body of a JSON-LD document.

6.11 Named Graphs

At times, it is necessary to make statements about a JSON-LD graph itself, rather than just a single node. This can be done by grouping a set of nodes using the @graph keyword. A developer may also name data expressed using the @graph keyword by pairing it with an @id keyword as shown in the following example:

Example 49: Identifying and making statements about a graph
{
  "@context": {
    "generatedAt": "http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#generatedAtTime",
    "Person": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/Person",
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
    "knows": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/knows",
    "xsd": "http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#"
  },
  "@id": "http://example.org/graphs/73",
  "generatedAt": { "@value": "2012-04-09", "@type": "xsd:date" },
  "@graph":
  [
    {
      "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public",
      "@type": "Person",
      "name": "Manu Sporny",
      "knows": "http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me"
    },
    {
      "@id": "http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me",
      "@type": "Person",
      "name": "Gregg Kellogg",
      "knows": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public"
    }
  ]
}

The example above expresses a named JSON-LD graph that is identified by the IRI http://example.org/graphs/73. That graph is composed of the statements about Manu and Gregg. Metadata about the graph itself is also expressed via the generatedAt property, which specifies when the graph was generated. An alternative view of the information above is represented in table form below:

Graph Subject Property Object Datatype
http://example.org/graphs/73 http://example.org/graphs/73 http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#generatedAtTime 2012-04-09 http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#date
http://example.org/graphs/73 http://manu.sporny.org/i/public http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#type http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/Person
http://example.org/graphs/73 http://manu.sporny.org/i/public http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name Manu Sporny
http://example.org/graphs/73 http://manu.sporny.org/i/public http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/knows http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me
http://example.org/graphs/73 http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#type http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/Person
http://example.org/graphs/73 http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name Gregg Kellogg
http://example.org/graphs/73 http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/knows http://manu.sporny.org/i/public

When @graph is used in a document's top-level object which has no other properties that are mapped to an IRI or a keyword it is considered to express the otherwise implicit default graph. This mechanism can be useful when a number of nodes thay may not directly relate to one another through a property or where embedding is not desirable to the application. For example:

Example 50: Using @graph to explicitly express the default graph
{
  "@context": ...,
  "@graph":
  [
    {
      "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public",
      "@type": "foaf:Person",
      "name": "Manu Sporny",
      "knows": "http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me"
    },
    {
      "@id": "http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me",
      "@type": "foaf:Person",
      "name": "Gregg Kellogg",
      "knows": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public"
    }
  ]
}

In this case, embedding doesn't work as each node object references the other. Using the @graph keyword allows multiple nodes to be defined within an array, and allows the use of a shared context. This is equivalent to using multiple node objects in array and defining the @context within each node object:

Example 51: Context needs to be duplicated if @graph is not used
[
  {
    "@context": ...,
    "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public",
    "@type": "foaf:Person",
    "name": "Manu Sporny",
    "knows": "http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me"
  },
  {
    "@context": ...,
    "@id": "http://greggkellogg.net/foaf#me",
    "@type": "foaf:Person",
    "name": "Gregg Kellogg",
    "knows": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public"
  }
]

6.12 Identifying Blank Nodes

At times, it becomes necessary to be able to express information without being able to specify the node. This type of node is called a blank node (see Section 3.4: Blank Nodes of [RDF-CONCEPTS]). In JSON-LD, blank node identifiers are automatically created if a node is not specified using the @id keyword. However, authors may provide identifiers for blank nodes by using the special _ (underscore) prefix. This allows one to reference the node locally within the document, but makes it impossible to reference the node from an external document. The blank node identifier is scoped to the document in which it is used.

Example 52: Specifying a local blank node identifier
{
...
  "@id": "_:foo",
...
}

The example above would set the node to _:foo, which can then be used elsewhere in the JSON-LD document to refer back to the blank node. If a developer finds that they refer to the blank node more than once, they should consider naming the node using a dereferenceable IRI so that it can also be referenced from other documents.

6.13 Aliasing Keywords

Each of the JSON-LD keywords, except for @context, may be aliased to application-specific keywords. This feature allows legacy JSON content to be utilized by JSON-LD by re-using JSON keys that already exist in legacy documents. This feature also allows developers to design domain-specific implementations using only the JSON-LD context.

Example 53: Aliasing keywords
{
  "@context":
  {
     "url": "@id",
     "a": "@type",
     "name": "http://schema.org/name"
  },
  "url": "http://example.com/about#gregg",
  "a": "http://schema.org/Person",
  "name": "Gregg Kellogg"
}

In the example above, the @id and @type keywords have been given the aliases url and a, respectively.

6.14 Data Annotations

It is common for developers using JSON to organize their data in ways that makes working with the data more efficient. It is often that these methods of organizing data are not meant to express Linked Data, but should survive transformation by JSON-LD. For example, if a developer organizes employees in a JSON-LD document by a company-issued ID number, JSON-LD should not destroy that 'database index' when transforming the data. Data annotations allow content that would otherwise be removed from a JSON-LD graph to be preserved by instructing the JSON-LD processor to syntactically preserve the annotation information and continue processing deeper into the JSON data structure.

Example 54: Data annotations
{
  "@context":
  {
     "schema": "http://schema.org/",
     "Article": "schema:Blog",
     "name": "schema:name",
     "articleBody": "schema:articleBody",
     "wordCount": "schema:wordCount",
     "commentCount": "http://example.com/schema/wordCount",
     "blogPost": {
       "@id": "schema:blogPost",
       "@container": "@annotation"
  },
  "@id": "http://example.com/",
  "@type": "Blog",
  "name": "World Financial News",
  "blogPost": {
     "en": {
       "@id": "http://example.com/posts/1/en",
       "articleBody": "World commodities were up today with heavy trading of crude oil...",
       "wordCount": 1539,
       "commentCount": 64
     },
     "de": {
       "@id": "http://example.com/posts/1/de",
       "articleBody": "Welt Rohstoffe waren bis heute mit schweren Handel mit Rohöl...",
       "wordCount": 1204,
       "commentCount": 23
     }
  }
}

In the example above, the blogPost term has been marked as a data annotation container. The en, de, and ja keys will effectively be ignored semantically, but preserved syntactically, by the JSON-LD Processor as annotations. The interpretation of the data above is expressed in the table below. Note how the annotations do not appear in the Linked Data below, but would continue to exist if the document were compacted or expanded using a JSON-LD processor:

Subject Property Object Datatype
http://example.com/ http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type http://schema.org/Blog
http://example.com/ http://schema.org/name World Financial News
http://example.com/ http://schema.org/blogPost http://example.com/posts/1/en
http://example.com/ http://schema.org/blogPost http://example.com/posts/1/de
http://example.com/posts/1/en http://schema.org/articleBody World commodities were up today with heavy trading of crude oil...
http://example.com/posts/1/en http://schema.org/wordCount 1539 http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer
http://example.com/posts/1/en http://example.com/schema/commentCount 64 http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer
http://example.com/posts/1/de http://schema.org/articleBody Welt Rohstoffe waren bis heute mit schweren Handel mit Rohöl...
http://example.com/posts/1/de http://schema.org/wordCount 1204 http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer
http://example.com/posts/1/de http://example.com/schema/commentCount 23 http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#integer

6.15 Explicitly Ignoring Data

At times, it becomes necessary to explicitly ignore data expressed in JSON documents because it has no semantic meaning. For example, when the @vocab keyword is used, every key in a JSON-LD object is appended to the vocabulary IRI. The author may not want that behavior to apply to every key, and it may be easier to specify just the keys that they want the JSON-LD processor to ignore. For this purpose, an author may associate the null keyword with a term in the JSON-LD Context.

Example 55: Using the null keyword to ignore data
{
  "@context":
  {
     "@vocab": "http://schema.org/",
     "databaseId": null
  },
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "description": "That guy",
  "gender": "Male",
  "databaseId": "23987520"
}

In the example above, the author has used @vocab as the base IRI for all terms in the document, but has expressed that the databaseId value should not be processed by the JSON-LD processor by associating it with the null keyword in the JSON-LD Context.

6.16 Expanded Document Form

The JSON-LD API [JSON-LD-API] defines an method for expanding a JSON-LD document. Expansion is the process of taking a JSON-LD document and applying a @context such that all IRIs, types, and values are expanded so that the @context is no longer necessary.

For example, assume the following JSON-LD input document:

Example 56: Sample JSON-LD document
{
   "@context":
   {
      "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
      "homepage": {
        "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
        "@type": "@id"
      }
   },
   "name": "Manu Sporny",
   "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/"
}

Running the JSON-LD Expansion algorithm against the JSON-LD input document provided above would result in the following output:

Example 57: Expanded form for the previous example
[
  {
    "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name": [
      { "@value": "Manu Sporny" }
    ],
    "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage": [
      { "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/" }
    ]
  }
]

Expanded document form is useful when an application has to process input data in a deterministic form. It has been optimized to ensure that the code that developers have to write is minimized compared to the code that would have to be written to operate on 6.17 Compact Document Form.

6.17 Compact Document Form

The JSON-LD API [JSON-LD-API] defines a method for compacting a JSON-LD document. Compaction is the process of taking a JSON-LD document and applying a context such that the most compact form of the document is generated. JSON is typically expressed in a very compact, key-value format. That is, full IRIs are rarely used as keys. At times, a JSON-LD document may be received that is not in its most compact form. JSON-LD, via the API, provides a way to compact a JSON-LD document.

For example, assume the following JSON-LD input document:

Example 58: Sample expanded JSON-LD document
[
  {
    "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name": [ "Manu Sporny" ],
    "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage": [
      {
       "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/"
      }
    ]
  }
]

Additionally, assume the following developer-supplied JSON-LD context:

Example 59: Sample context
{
  "@context": {
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
    "homepage": {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    }
  }
}

Running the JSON-LD Compaction algorithm given the context supplied above against the JSON-LD input document provided above would result in the following output:

Example 60: Compact form of the sample document once sample context has been applied
{
  "@context": {
    "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
    "homepage": {
      "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
      "@type": "@id"
    }
  },
  "name": "Manu Sporny",
  "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/"
}

The compaction algorithm enables a developer to map any document into an application-specific compacted form by first 6.16 Expanded Document Form. While the context provided above mapped http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name to name, it could have also mapped it to any arbitrary string provided by the developer. This powerful mechanism allows the developer to re-shape the incoming JSON data into a format that is optimized for their application.

A. Data Model

JSON-LD is a serialization format for Linked Data based on JSON. It is therefore important to distinguish between the syntax, which is defined by JSON in [RFC4627], and JSON-LD's data model which is defined as follows:

Issue

In contrast to the RDF data model as defined in [RDF-CONCEPTS], JSON-LD allows blank nodes as property labels and graph names. This feature is controversial in the RDF WG and may be removed in the future.

JSON-LD documents may contain data that cannot be represented by the data model defined above. Unless otherwise specified, such data is ignored when a JSON-LD document is being processed. This means, e.g., that properties which are not mapped to an IRI or blank node will be ignored.

Figure 1: An illustration of JSON-LD's data model.

B. JSON-LD Grammar

This section is normative

This section is an attempt to formalize a normative grammar for JSON-LD.

This appendix restates the syntactic conventions described in the previous sections more formally.

Note

The JSON-LD context allows keywords 6.13 Aliasing Keywords). Whenever a keyword is discussed in this grammar, the statements also apply to an alias for that keyword. For example, if the active context defines the term id as an alias for @id, that alias may be legitimately used as a substitution for @id. Note that keyword aliases are not expanded during context processing.

A JSON-LD document must be a valid JSON document as described in [RFC4627].

A JSON-LD document must be a single node object or a JSON array containing a set of one or more node objects.

B.1 Node Object

A node object represents zero or more properties of a node in the JSON-LD graph serialized by the JSON-LD document. A JSON Object is a node object if it exists outside of the JSON-LD Context and:

The properties of a node in the JSON-LD graph may be spread among different node objects within a document. When that happens, the keys of the different node objects are merged to create the properties of the resulting node.

A node object must be a JSON object that contains one or more key-value pairs. Keys must either be IRIs, compact IRIs, terms valid in the active context, or one of the following keywords:

If the node object contains the @context key, its value must be one of the following:

If the node object contains the @id key, its value must be an IRI, a compact IRI (including blank node identifiers), or a term defined in the active context expanding into an IRI or a blank node identifier. See 5.4 Node Identifiers, 6.1 Compact IRIs, and 6.12 Identifying Blank Nodes for further discussion on @id values.

If the node object contains the @type key, its value must be either an absolute IRI, a compact IRI (excluding blank node identifier), a term defined in the active context expanding into an absolute IRI, or an array of any of these. See 5.5 Specifying the Type for further discussion on @type values.

If the node object contains the @graph key, its value must be a node object or an array of zero or more node objects. If the node object contains an @id keyword, its value is used as the label of a named graph. See 6.11 Named Graphs for further discussion on @graph values.

Note

As a special case, if a JSON object contains no keys other than @graph and @context, and the JSON object is the root of the JSON-LD document, the JSON object is not treated as a node object; this is used as a way of defining node definitions that may not form a connected graph. This allows a context to be defined which is shared by all of the constituent node objects.

A JSON-LD document must not contain any keyword that expands to another keyword.

Keys in a node object that are not keywords must expand to an absolute IRI using the active context. The values associated with these keys must be one of the following:

B.2 Term

A term is a short-hand string that expands to an IRI or a blank node identifier.

A term must not equal any of the JSON-LD keywords.

To avoid forward-compatibility issues, a term should not start with an @ character as future versions of JSON-LD may introduce additional keywords. Furthermore, the use of empty terms ("") is discouraged as not all programming languages are able to handle empty property names.

See 5.1 The Context and 5.3 IRIs for further discussion on mapping terms to IRIs.

B.3 Language Map

A language map is used to associate a language with a value in a way that allows easy programmatic access. A language map may be used as a term value within a node object if the term is defined with @container set to @language. The keys of a language map must be lowercase [BCP47] strings with an associated value that is any of the following types:

See 6.3 Language-tagged Strings for further discussion on language maps.

B.4 Annotation Map

An annotation map allows keys that have no semantic meaning, but should be preserved regardless, to be used in JSON-LD documents. An annotation map may be used as a term value within a node object if the term is defined with @container set to @annotation. The keys of a annotation map must be strings with an associated value that is any of the following types:

See 6.14 Data Annotations for further information on this topic.

B.5 Expanded Values

An expanded value is used to explicitly associate a type or a language with a value to create a typed value or a language-tagged string.

An expanded value must be a JSON object containing the @value key. It may also contain a @type or a @language key but must not contain both a @type and a @language key. An expanded value must not contain keys other than @value, @language, and @type. An expanded value that contains a @type key is called an expanded typed value. An expanded value that contains a @language key is called an expanded language-tagged string.

The value associated with the @value key must be either a string, number, true, false or null.

The value associated with the @language key must have the lexical form described in [BCP47], or be null.

The value associated with the @annotation key must be a string.

The value associated with the @type key must be a term, a compact IRI, an absolute IRI, or null.

See 6.2 Typed Values and 6.3 Language-tagged Strings for more information on expanded values.

B.6 List and Set Values

A list represents an ordered set of values. A set represents an unordered set of values. Unless otherwise specified (typically through the use of a list), arrays are unordered in JSON-LD. As such, the @set keyword, when used in the body of a JSON-LD document, represents just syntactic sugar which is optimized away when processing the document. However, it is very helpful when used within the context of a document. Values of terms associated with a @set or @list container will always be represented in the form of an array when a document is processed - even if there is just a single value that would otherwise be optimized to a non-array form in compact document form. This simplifies post-processing of the data as the data is always in array form.

A list must be a JSON object that contains a single key-value pair where the key is @list.

A set must be a JSON object that contains a single key-value pair where the key is @set.

In both cases, the value associated with the key must be an array of any of the following:

See 6.9 Sets and Lists for further discussion on List and Set Values.

B.7 Context Definition

A context definition defines a local context in a node object.

A context definition must be a JSON object containing one or more key-value pairs. Keys must either be terms or @language or @vocab keywords.

If the context definition has a @language key, its value must have the lexical form described in [BCP47] or be null.

If the context definition has a @vocab key, its value must have the lexical form of absolute IRI or be null.

Term values must be either a string, null, or an expanded term definition.

An expanded term definition is used to describe the mapping between a term and its expanded identifier, as well as other properties of the value associated with the term when it is used as key in a node object.

An expanded term definition should be a JSON object composed of zero or more keys from @id, @type, @language or @container. An expanded term definition should not contain any other keys.

If the term definition is not null, a compact IRI, or an absolute IRI, the expanded term definition must include the @id key.

If the expanded term definition contains the @id keyword, its value must be null, an IRI, a compact IRI, a term defined in the defining context definition or the active context, or an array composed of any of the previous allowed values.

If the expanded term definition contains the @type keyword, its value must be an absolute IRI, a compact IRI, a term defined in the defining context definition or the active context, or the @id keyword.

If the expanded term definition contains the @language keyword, its value must have the lexical form described in [BCP47] or be null.

If the expanded term definition contains the @container keyword, its value must be either @list, @set, @language, @annotation, or be null. If the value is @language, when the term is used outside of the @context, the associated value must be a language map. If the value is @annotation, when the term is used outside of the @context, the associated value must be an annotation map.

Terms must not be used in a circular manner. That is, the definition of a term cannot depend on the definition of another term if that other term also depends on the first term.

See 5.1 The Context and 6.5 Expanded Term Definition for further discussion on contexts.

C. Relationship to RDF

The RDF data model, as outlined in [RDF-CONCEPTS], is an abstract syntax for representing a directed graph of information. It is a subset of JSON-LD's data model with a few additional constraints. The differences between the two data models are:

Summarized these differences mean that JSON-LD is capable of serializing any RDF graph or dataset and most, but not all, JSON-LD documents can be transformed to RDF. A complete description of the algorithms to convert from RDF to JSON-LD and from JSON-LD to RDF is included in the JSON-LD API [JSON-LD-API] specification.

Even though JSON-LD serializes RDF datasets, it can also be used as a RDF graph source. In that case, a consumer must only use the default graph and ignore all named graphs. This allows servers to expose data in, e.g., both Turtle and JSON-LD using content negotiation.

Note

Publishers supporting both dataset and graph syntaxes have to ensure that the primary data is stored in the default graph to enable consumers that do not support datasets to process the information.

D. Relationship to Other Linked Data Formats

This section is non-normative.

The JSON-LD markup examples below demonstrate how JSON-LD can be used to express semantic data marked up in other linked data formats such as Turtle, RDFa, Microformats, and Microdata. These sections are merely provided as evidence that JSON-LD is very flexible in what it can express across different Linked Data approaches.

D.1 Turtle

This section is non-normative.

The following are examples of converting RDF expressed in [TURTLE-TR] into JSON-LD.

D.1.1 Prefix definitions

This section is non-normative.

The JSON-LD context has direct equivalents for the Turtle @prefix declaration:

Example 61: A set of statements serialized in Turtle
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .

<http://manu.sporny.org/i/public> a foaf:Person;
  foaf:name "Manu Sporny";
  foaf:homepage <http://manu.sporny.org/> .
Example 62: The same set of statements serialized in JSON-LD
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/"
  },
  "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public",
  "@type": "foaf:Person",
  "foaf:name": "Manu Sporny",
  "foaf:homepage": { "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/" }
}
Note

JSON-LD has no equivalent for the Turtle @base declaration.

D.1.2 Embedding

Both Turtle and JSON-LD allow embedding, although Turtle only allows embedding of blank nodes.

Example 63: Embedding in Turtle
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .

<http://manu.sporny.org/i/public>
  a foaf:Person;
  foaf:name "Manu Sporny";
  foaf:knows [ a foaf:Person; foaf:name "Gregg Kellogg" ] .
Example 64: Same embedding example in JSON-LD
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/"
  },
  "@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public",
  "@type": "foaf:Person",
  "foaf:name": "Manu Sporny",
  "foaf:knows":
  {
    "@type": "foaf:Person",
    "foaf:name": "Gregg Kellogg"
  }
}

D.1.3 Lists

Both JSON-LD and Turtle can represent sequential lists of values.

Example 65: A list of values in Turtle
@prefix foaf: <http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/> .

<http://example.org/people#joebob> a foaf:Person;
  foaf:name "Joe Bob";
  foaf:nick ( "joe" "bob" "jaybee" ) .
Example 66: Same example with a list of values in JSON-LD
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/"
  },
  "@id": "http://example.org/people#joebob",
  "@type": "foaf:Person",
  "foaf:name": "Joe Bob",
  "foaf:nick":
  {
    "@list": [ "joe", "bob", "jaybee" ]
  }
}

D.2 RDFa

The following example describes three people with their respective names and homepages.

Example 67: RDFa fragment that describes three people
<div prefix="foaf: http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/">
   <ul>
      <li typeof="foaf:Person">
        <a rel="foaf:homepage" href="http://example.com/bob/" property="foaf:name" >Bob</a>
      </li>
      <li typeof="foaf:Person">
        <a rel="foaf:homepage" href="http://example.com/eve/" property="foaf:name" >Eve</a>
      </li>
      <li typeof="foaf:Person">
        <a rel="foaf:homepage" href="http://example.com/manu/" property="foaf:name" >Manu</a>
      </li>
   </ul>
</div>

An example JSON-LD implementation using a single context is described below.

Example 68: Same description in JSON-LD (context shared among node objects)
{
  "@context":
  {
    "foaf": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/"
  },
  "@graph":
  [
    {
      "@type": "foaf:Person",
      "foaf:homepage": "http://example.com/bob/",
      "foaf:name": "Bob"
    },
    {
      "@type": "foaf:Person",
      "foaf:homepage": "http://example.com/eve/",
      "foaf:name": "Eve"
    },
    {
      "@type": "foaf:Person",
      "foaf:homepage": "http://example.com/manu/",
      "foaf:name": "Manu"
    }
  ]
}

D.3 Microformats

The following example uses a simple Microformats hCard example to express how the Microformat is represented in JSON-LD.

Example 69: HTML fragment with a simple Microformats hCard
<div class="vcard">
 <a class="url fn" href="http://tantek.com/">Tantek Çelik</a>
</div>

The representation of the hCard expresses the Microformat terms in the context and uses them directly for the url and fn properties. Also note that the Microformat to JSON-LD processor has generated the proper URL type for http://tantek.com/.

Example 70: Same hCard representation in JSON-LD
{
  "@context":
  {
    "vcard": "http://microformats.org/profile/hcard#vcard",
    "url":
    {
      "@id": "http://microformats.org/profile/hcard#url",
      "@type": "@id"
    },
    "fn": "http://microformats.org/profile/hcard#fn"
  },
  "@type": "vcard",
  "url": "http://tantek.com/",
  "fn": "Tantek Çelik"
}

D.4 Microdata

The microdata example below expresses book information as a microdata Work item.

Example 71: HTML fragments that describes a book using microdata
<dl itemscope
    itemtype="http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#Work"
    itemid="http://purl.oreilly.com/works/45U8QJGZSQKDH8N">
 <dt>Title</dt>
 <dd><cite itemprop="http://purl.org/dc/terms/title">Just a Geek</cite></dd>
 <dt>By</dt>
 <dd><span itemprop="http://purl.org/dc/terms/creator">Wil Wheaton</span></dd>
 <dt>Format</dt>
 <dd itemprop="http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#realization"
     itemscope
     itemtype="http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#Expression"
     itemid="http://purl.oreilly.com/products/9780596007683.BOOK">
  <link itemprop="http://purl.org/dc/terms/type" href="http://purl.oreilly.com/product-types/BOOK">
  Print
 </dd>
 <dd itemprop="http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#realization"
     itemscope
     itemtype="http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#Expression"
     itemid="http://purl.oreilly.com/products/9780596802189.EBOOK">
  <link itemprop="http://purl.org/dc/terms/type" href="http://purl.oreilly.com/product-types/EBOOK">
  Ebook
 </dd>
</dl>

Note that the JSON-LD representation of the Microdata information stays true to the desires of the Microdata community to avoid contexts and instead refer to items by their full IRI.

Example 72: Same book description in JSON-LD (avoiding contexts)
[
  {
    "@id": "http://purl.oreilly.com/works/45U8QJGZSQKDH8N",
    "@type": "http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#Work",
    "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title": "Just a Geek",
    "http://purl.org/dc/terms/creator": "Whil Wheaton",
    "http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#realization":
    [
      "http://purl.oreilly.com/products/9780596007683.BOOK",
      "http://purl.oreilly.com/products/9780596802189.EBOOK"
    ]
  },
  {
    "@id": "http://purl.oreilly.com/products/9780596007683.BOOK",
    "@type": "http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#Expression",
    "http://purl.org/dc/terms/type": "http://purl.oreilly.com/product-types/BOOK"
  },
  {
    "@id": "http://purl.oreilly.com/products/9780596802189.EBOOK",
    "@type": "http://purl.org/vocab/frbr/core#Expression",
    "http://purl.org/dc/terms/type": "http://purl.oreilly.com/product-types/EBOOK"
  }
]

E. IANA Considerations

This section is non-normative.

This section is included merely for standards community review and will be submitted to the Internet Engineering Steering Group if this specification becomes a W3C Recommendation.

application/ld+json

Type name:
application
Subtype name:
ld+json
Required parameters:
None
Optional parameters:
form
Determines the serialization form for the JSON-LD document. The only valid value at the moment is expanded. If no form is specified in an HTTP request header to an HTTP server, the server may choose any form. If no form is specified in an HTTP response, the form must not be assumed to take any particular form.
profile
A whitespace-separated list of IRIs identifying specific constraints or conventions that apply to a JSON-LD document. A profile must not change the semantics of the resource representation when processed without profile knowledge, so that clients both with and without knowledge of a profiled resource can safely use the same representation. The profile parameter may also be used by clients to express their preferences in the content negotiation process. It is recommended that profile IRIs are dereferenceable and provide useful documentation at that IRI. This specification, however, does not define any formats for such profile descriptions.
Encoding considerations:
The same as the application/json MIME media type.
Security considerations:
Since JSON-LD is intended to be a pure data exchange format for directed graphs, the serialization should not be passed through a code execution mechanism such as JavaScript's eval() function. It is recommended that a conforming parser does not attempt to directly evaluate the JSON-LD serialization and instead purely parse the input into a language-native data structure.
Interoperability considerations:
Not Applicable
Published specification:
The JSON-LD specification.
Applications that use this media type:
Any programming environment that requires the exchange of directed graphs. Implementations of JSON-LD have been created for JavaScript, Python, Ruby, PHP and C++.
Additional information:
Magic number(s):
Not Applicable
File extension(s):
.jsonld
Macintosh file type code(s):
TEXT
Person & email address to contact for further information:
Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com>
Intended usage:
Common
Restrictions on usage:
None
Author(s):
Manu Sporny, Gregg Kellogg, Markus Lanthaler, Dave Longley
Change controller:
W3C

Fragment identifiers used with application/ld+json resources may identify a node in a JSON-LD graph expressed in the resource. This idiom, which is also used in RDF [RDF-CONCEPTS], gives a simple way to "mint" new, document-local IRIs to label nodes and therefore contributes considerably to the expressive power of JSON-LD.

F. Acknowledgements

This section is non-normative.

A large amount of thanks goes out to the JSON-LD Community Group participants who worked through many of the technical issues on the mailing list and the weekly telecons - of special mention are Niklas Lindström, François Daoust, Lin Clark, and Zdenko 'Denny' Vrandečić. The editors would like to thank Mark Birbeck, who provided a great deal of the initial push behind the JSON-LD work via his work on RDFj. The work of Dave Lehn and Mike Johnson are appreciated for reviewing, and performing several implementations of the specification. Ian Davis is thanked for this work on RDF/JSON. Thanks also to Nathan Rixham, Bradley P. Allen, Kingsley Idehen, Glenn McDonald, Alexandre Passant, Danny Ayers, Ted Thibodeau Jr., Olivier Grisel, Josh Mandel, Eric Prud'hommeaux, David Wood, Guus Schreiber, Pat Hayes, Sandro Hawke, and Richard Cyganiak for their input on the specification.

G. References

G.1 Normative references

[BCP47]
A. Phillips; M. Davis. Tags for Identifying Languages September 2009. IETF Best Current Practice. URL: http://tools.ietf.org/html/bcp47
[RDF-CONCEPTS]
RDF 1.1 Concepts and Abstract Syntax Richard Cyganiak, David Wood, Editors. World Wide Web Consortium (work in progress). 30 May 2012. Editor's Draft. This edition of the JSON-LD Syntax specification is http://www.w3.org/TR/2011/WD-rdf11-concepts-20110830/. The latest edition of the JSON-LD Syntax is available at http://www.w3.org/TR/rdf11-concepts/
[RFC2119]
S. Bradner. Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels. March 1997. Internet RFC 2119. URL: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt
[RFC3987]
M. Dürst; M. Suignard. Internationalized Resource Identifiers (IRIs). January 2005. Internet RFC 3987. URL: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3987.txt
[RFC4627]
D. Crockford. The application/json Media Type for JavaScript Object Notation (JSON) July 2006. Internet RFC 4627. URL: http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt
[RFC5988]
Web Linking M. Nottingham. Editor. October 2010. IETF Standard. URL: http://tools.ietf.org/rfc/rfc5988.txt

G.2 Informative references

[JSON-LD-API]
The JSON-LD API 1.0 Manu Sporny, Gregg Kellogg, Dave Longley, Markus Lanthaler, Editors. World Wide Web Consortium (work in progress). 24 May 2012. Editor's Draft. This edition of the JSON-LD Syntax specification is http://json-ld.org/spec/ED/json-ld-api/20120524/. The latest edition of the JSON-LD Syntax is available at http://json-ld.org/spec/latest/json-ld-api/
[RDF-SCHEMA]
Dan Brickley; Ramanathan V. Guha. RDF Vocabulary Description Language 1.0: RDF Schema. 10 February 2004. W3C Recommendation. URL: http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/REC-rdf-schema-20040210
[RDFA-CORE]
Shane McCarron; et al. RDFa Core 1.1: Syntax and processing rules for embedding RDF through attributes. 7 June 2012. W3C Recommendation. URL: http://www.w3.org/TR/2012/REC-rdfa-core-20120607/
[TURTLE-TR]
Eric Prud'hommeaux, Gavin Carothers. Turtle: Terse RDF Triple Language. 09 August 2011. W3C Working Draft. URL: http://www.w3.org/TR/2011/WD-turtle-20110809/