--- a/spec/latest/index.html Sun Aug 28 21:19:46 2011 -0400
+++ b/spec/latest/index.html Tue Aug 30 15:49:07 2011 -0700
@@ -291,34 +291,34 @@
<p>
JSON, as specified in [[!RFC4627]], is a simple language for representing
-data on the Web. Linked Data is a technique for describing content across
+data on the Web. Linked Data is a technique for creating a graph of interlinked data across
different
-documents or Web sites. Web resources are described using <tref>IRI</tref>s,
-and typically are dereferencable entities that may be used to find more
-information, creating a "Web of Knowledge". JSON-LD is intended to be a simple
-publishing method for expressing not only Linked Data in JSON, but for adding
+documents or Web sites. Data entities are described using <tref>IRI</tref>s,
+which are typically dereferencable and thus may be used to find more
+information about an entity, creating a "Web of Knowledge". JSON-LD is intended to be a simple
+publishing method for expressing not only Linked Data in JSON, but also for adding
semantics to existing JSON.
</p>
<p>
JSON-LD is designed as a light-weight syntax that can be used to express
-Linked Data. It is primarily intended to be a way to express Linked Data
+Linked Data. It is primarily intended to be a way to use Linked Data
in Javascript and other Web-based programming environments. It is also
-useful when building interoperable Web Services and when storing Linked
+useful when building interoperable Web services and when storing Linked
Data in JSON-based document storage engines. It is practical and designed
to be as simple as possible, utilizing the large number of JSON parsers
-and existing code that is in use today. It is designed to be able to
+and libraries available today. It is designed to be able to
express key-value pairs, RDF data, RDFa [[RDFA-CORE]] data, Microformats
[[MICROFORMATS]] data, and Microdata [[MICRODATA]]. That is, it supports
every major Web-based structured data model in use today.
</p>
<p>
-The syntax does not require many applications to change their JSON, but
-easily add meaning by adding context in a way that is either in-band or
+The syntax does not necessarily require applications to change their JSON, but
+allows to easily add meaning by adding context in a way that is either in-band or
out-of-band. The syntax is designed to not disturb already deployed systems
-running on JSON, but provide a smooth migration path from JSON to JSON with
-added semantics. Finally, the format is intended to be fast to parse, fast to
+running on JSON, but provide a smooth upgrade path from JSON to JSON with
+added semantics. Finally, the format is intended to be easy to parse, efficient to
generate, stream-based and document-based processing compatible, and require
a very small memory footprint in order to operate.
</p>
@@ -327,8 +327,8 @@
<h2>How to Read this Document</h2>
<p>
-This document is a detailed specification for a serialization of JSON for Linked
-data. The document is primarily intended for the following audiences:
+This document is a detailed specification for a serialization of Linked
+Data in JSON. The document is primarily intended for the following audiences:
</p>
<ul>
@@ -371,24 +371,25 @@
each name, separating the name from the value. A single comma separates a value
from a following name. The names within an object SHOULD be unique.
</dd>
- <dt><tdef>array</tdef></dt><dd>
- An <em>array</em> is an ordered collection of values. An array begins with [ (left bracket) and ends with ]
- (right bracket). Values are separated by , (comma). Within JSON-LD, array order is not preserved, unless
+ <dt><tdef>array</tdef></dt>
+ <dd>
+ An array is an ordered collection of values. An array structure is represented as square brackets surrounding zero or more values (or elements). Elements are separated by commas. Within JSON-LD, array order is not preserved by default, unless
specific markup is provided (see <a href="#lists">Lists</a>). This is because the basic data model of JSON-LD
- <tref>linked data graph</tref>, which is inherently unordered.
+ is a directed <tref>graph</tref>, which is inherently unordered.
</dd>
<dt><tdef>string</tdef></dt><dd>
A string is a sequence of zero or more Unicode characters, wrapped in double quotes, using backslash escapes. A
- character is represented as a single character string. A string is very much like a C or Java string.
+ character is represented as a single character string.
</dd>
- <dt><tdef>number</tdef></dt><dd>
- A number is very much like a C or Java number, except that the octal and hexadecimal formats are not used.
- </dd>
+ <dt><tdef>number</tdef></dt>
+ <dd>
+ A number is 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.</dd>
<dt><tdef>true</tdef> and <tdef>false</tdef></dt><dd>
Boolean values.
</dd>
<dt><tdef>null</tdef></dt><dd>
The use of the <em>null</em> value is undefined within JSON-LD.
+ <div class="issue">Supporting <em>null</em> in JSON-LD might have a number of advantages and should be evaluated. This is currently an <a href="https://github.com/json-ld/json-ld.org/issues/11">open issue</a>.</div>
</dd>
</dl>
</p>
@@ -452,7 +453,7 @@
to be able to simply express almost every real world data model.</dd>
<dt>Terseness</dt>
<dd>The JSON-LD syntax must be very terse and human readable, requiring as
- little as possible from the developer.</dd>
+ little as possible effort from the developer.</dd>
<!--<dt>Pragmatism</dt>
<dd>Mixing the expression of pure Linked Data with data that is not
linked was an approach that was driven by pragmatism. JSON-LD attempts to be
@@ -461,12 +462,12 @@
<dd>JSON-LD provides a mechanism that allows developers to specify
context in a way that is out-of-band. This allows organizations that have
already deployed large JSON-based infrastructure to add meaning to their
- JSON in a way that is not disruptive to their day-to-day operations and is
+ JSON documents 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 esoteric markup, we chose not to support the use case
- and support a simplified syntax instead. So, while Zero Edits was a goal,
- it was not always possible without adding great complexity to the language.
+ and support a simplified syntax instead. So, while Zero Edits is a goal,
+ it is not always possible without adding great complexity to the language.
</dd>
<dt>Streaming</dt>
<dd>The format supports both document-based and stream-based processing.</dd>
@@ -483,13 +484,14 @@
<li><tdef>Linked Data</tdef> is a set of documents, each containing a representation of a linked data graph.</li>
<li>A <tdef>linked data graph</tdef> is an unordered labeled directed graph, where nodes are <tref>subject</tref>s or <tref>object</tref>s, and edges are properties.</li>
<li>A <tdef>subject</tdef> is any node in a <tref>linked data graph</tref> with at least one outgoing edge.</li>
- <li>A <tref>subject</tref> SHOULD be labeled with an IRI.</li>
+ <li>A <tref>subject</tref> SHOULD be labeled with an <tref>IRI</tref> (an Internationalized Resource Identifier as described in [[!RFC3987]]).</li>
+ <li>An <tdef>object</tdef> is a node in a <tref>linked data graph</tref> with at least one incoming edge.</li>
+ <li>An <tref>object</tref> MAY be labeled with an <tref>IRI</tref>.</li>
+ <li>An object MAY be a <tdef>subject</tdef> and <tref>object</tref> at the same time.</li>
<li>A <tdef>property</tdef> is an edge of the <tref>linked data graph</tref>.</li>
- <li>A <tref>property</tref> SHOULD be labeled with an IRI.</li>
- <li>An <tdef>object</tdef> is a node in a <tref>linked data graph</tref> with at least one incoming edge.</li>
- <li>An <tref>object</tref> MAY be labeled with an IRI.</li>
- <li>An IRI that is a label in a <tref>linked data graph</tref> SHOULD be dereferencable to a <tref>Linked Data</tref> document describing the labeled <tref>subject</tref>, <tref>object</tref> or <tref>property</tref>.</li>
- <li>A <tdef>literal</tdef> is an <tref>object</tref> with a label that is not an IRI</li>
+ <li>A <tref>property</tref> SHOULD be labeled with an <tref>IRI</tref>.</li>
+ <li>An <tref>IRI</tref> that is a label in a <tref>linked data graph</tref> SHOULD be dereferencable to a <tref>Linked Data</tref> document describing the labeled <tref>subject</tref>, <tref>object</tref> or <tref>property</tref>.</li>
+ <li>A <tdef>literal</tdef> is an <tref>object</tref> with a label that is not an <tref>IRI</tref></li>
</ol>
<p>
@@ -514,9 +516,9 @@
<tref>object</tref>.
</p>
-<p>JSON-LD defines a mechanism to map JSON values to IRIs. This does not mean
+<p>JSON-LD defines a mechanism to map JSON terms, i.e., keys and values, to IRIs. This does not mean
that JSON-LD requires every key or value to be an IRI, but rather ensures that
-keys and values can be mapped to IRIs if the developer so desires to transform
+keys and values can be mapped to IRIs if the developer desires to transform
their data into Linked Data. There are a few techniques that can ensure
that developers will generate good Linked Data for the Web. JSON-LD
formalizes those techniques.
@@ -540,20 +542,35 @@
<section>
<h3>The Context</h3>
-<p>In JSON-LD, a context is used to allow developers to map <tref>term</tref>s
-to <tref>IRI</tref>s. A <tdef>term</tdef> is a short word that MAY be expanded
+<p>In JSON-LD, a context is used to map
+ <tref>term</tref>
+ s, i.e., keys and values in an JSON document,
+to
+ <tref>IRI</tref>s. A <tdef>term</tdef> is a short word that MAY be expanded
to an <tref>IRI</tref>. The semantic web, just like the document-based
web, uses IRIs for unambiguous identification. The idea is that these
-<tref>term</tref>s mean something that may be of use to other developers.
+<tref>term</tref>
+s mean something that may be of use to other developers.
For example, the term <code>name</code> may map directly to the IRI
<code>http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name</code>. This allows JSON-LD documents to
be constructed using the common JSON practice of simple name/value pairs while
-ensuring that the data is useful outside of the database or page in which it
+ensuring that the data is useful outside of the page, API or database in which it
resides.
</p>
-<p>These Linked Data <tref>term</tref>s are typically collected in a context and
-then used by adding a single line to the JSON markup above:</p>
+<p>These Linked Data <tref>term</tref>s are typically collected in a context document that would look something like this:</p>
+
+<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
+<!--
+{
+ "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
+ "homepage": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
+ "avatar": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/avatar"
+}
+-->
+</pre>
+
+<p>This context document can then be used in an JSON-LD document by adding a single line. The JSON markup as shown in the previous section could be changed as follows to link to the context document:</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
@@ -574,23 +591,46 @@
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 inter-operate on a
-site-by-site basis.</p>
+site-by-site basis. Contexts may also contain datatype information
+for certain <tref>term</tref>s as well as other processing instructions for
+the JSON-LD processor.</p>
+<p>Contexts may be specified in-line. This ensures that JSON-LD documents
+can be processed when a JSON-LD processor does not have access to the Web.</p>
+
+<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
+<!--
+{
+ ****"@context": {
+ "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
+ "homepage": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
+ "avatar": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/avatar"
+ },****
+ "name": "Manu Sporny",
+ "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
+ "avatar": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
+}
+-->
+</pre>
+
+<p> JSON-LD strives to ensure that developers don't have to change the JSON
+ that is going into and being returned from their Web APIs. This means
+ that developers can also specify a context for JSON data in an out-of-band
+ fashion. This is described later in this document. </p>
<p>
-The semantic web uses a special type of document called a
-<em>Web Vocabulary</em> to define <tref>term</tref>s. A context is a type of
-Web vocabulary.
-Typically, these Web Vocabulary documents have <tref>prefix</tref>es associated
-with them and contain a number of <tref>term</tref> declarations. A
-<tdef>prefix</tdef>, like a <tref>term</tref>, is a short word that expands
-to a Web Vocabulary IRI. <tref>Prefix</tref>es are helpful when a developer
-wants to mix multiple vocabularies together in a context, but does not want
-to go to the trouble of defining every single term in every single vocabulary.
-Some Web Vocabularies may have 10-20 terms defined. If a developer wants to use
-3-4 different vocabularies, the number of terms that
-would have to be declared in a single context would become quite large. To
-reduce the number of different terms that must be defined, JSON-LD also allows
-prefixes to be used to compact IRIs.
+ The semantic web uses a special type of document called a
+ <em>Web Vocabulary</em> to define <tref>term</tref>s.
+ Typically, these Web Vocabulary documents have <tref>prefix</tref>es associated
+ with them and contain a number of <tref>term</tref> declarations. A
+ <tdef>prefix</tdef>, like a <tref>term</tref>, is a short word that expands
+ to a Web Vocabulary base IRI. <tref>Prefix</tref>es are helpful when a developer
+ wants to mix multiple vocabularies together in a context, but does not want
+ to go to the trouble of defining every single term in every single vocabulary.
+ Some Web Vocabularies may have dozens of terms defined. If a developer wants to use
+ 3-4 different vocabularies, the number of terms that
+ would have to be declared in a single context could become quite large. To
+ reduce the number of different terms that must be defined, JSON-LD also allows
+ prefixes to be used to compact IRIs.
<p>
<p>For example, the IRI <code>http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/</code>
@@ -607,11 +647,10 @@
<p>Developers, and machines, are able to use this IRI (plugging it
directly into a web browser, for instance) to go to the term and get a
-definition of what the term means. Much like we can use WordNet today to
-see the
-<a href="http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=definition">definition</a>
+definition of what the term means. Much like we can use <a href="http://wordnet.princeton.edu/">WordNet</a> today to
+see the definition
of words in the English language. Developers and machines need the same sort of
-dictionary of terms. IRIs provide a way to ensure that these terms
+definition of terms. IRIs provide a way to ensure that these terms
are unambiguous.
</p>
@@ -619,45 +658,6 @@
<tref>prefix</tref>es that can be used to expand JSON keys and values into
<tref>IRI</tref>s.</p>
-<section>
-<h3>Inside a Context</h3>
-
-<p>In the previous section, the developer used the <code>@context</code>
-keyword to pull in an external context. That context document, if
-de-referenced, would look something like this:</p>
-
-<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
-<!--
-{
- "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
- "homepage": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
- "avatar": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/avatar"
-}
--->
-</pre>
-
-<p>A JSON-LD context document is a simple mapping from <tref>term</tref>s and
-<tref>prefix</tref>es to expanded values such as IRIs or keywords. Contexts may also contain datatype information
-for certain <tref>term</tref>s as well as other processing instructions for
-the JSON-LD processor.
-</p>
-
-<p>Contexts may be specified in-line. This ensures that JSON-LD documents
-can be processed when a JSON-LD processor does not have access to the Web.</p>
-
-<p>
-JSON-LD strives to ensure that developers don't have to change the JSON
-that is going into and being returned from their Web applications. This means
-that developers can also specify a context for JSON data in an out-of-band
-fashion via the API. The API is described later in this document. A JSON-LD
-aware Web Service MAY also define a context that will be pre-loaded for all
-calls to the service. This allows services that have previously been publishing
-and receiving JSON data to accept JSON-LD data without requiring client
-software to change.
-</p>
-
-</section>
-
</section>
<section>
@@ -680,7 +680,10 @@
</pre>
<p>Doing this allows JSON to be unambiguously machine-readable without
-requiring developers that use JSON to drastically change their workflow.</p>
+requiring developers to drastically change their workflow.</p>
+<p class="note">Please note that this JSON-LD document doesn't define the
+subject and will thus result in an unlabeled or blank node.</p>
+
</section>
</section>
@@ -754,15 +757,15 @@
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
{
- "****@context****": {"****name****": "****http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name****"},
+ "****@context****": {"****foaf****": "****http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/****"},
...
- "****name****": "Manu Sporny",
+ "****foaf:name****": "Manu Sporny",
...
}
-->
</pre>
-<p><code>name</code> above will automatically expand out to the IRI
+<p><code>foaf:name</code> above will automatically expand out to the IRI
<code>http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name</code>.</p>
<p>An IRI is generated when a value is associated with a key using
@@ -809,16 +812,18 @@
<h2>Identifying the Subject</h2>
<p>
- <tref>IRI</tref>s are a fundamental concept of Linked Data, and nodes should have a de-referencable
+ <tref>To be able to externally reference nodes, it is important that each node has an unambiguous identifier. IRI</tref>
+ s 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 truely linked, de-referencing the identifier
should result in a representation of that node. Associating an IRI with a node tells an application
- that the returned document contains a description of of the identifier requested.
+ that the returned document contains a description of the node requested.
</p>
<p>
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.
</p>
-<p>A <tref>subject</tref> of a node is declared using the <code>@subject</code> key. The subject is the
+<p>A <tref>subject</tref>
+ of an object in JSON is declared using the <code>@subject</code> key. The subject is the
first piece of information needed by the JSON-LD processor in order to
create the (subject, property, object) tuple, also known as a triple.</p>
@@ -843,9 +848,10 @@
<p>The type of a particular subject can be specified using the
<code>@type</code> key. Specifying the type in this way will generate a
-triple of the form (subject, type, type-uri).</p>
-
-<p>To be Linked Data, types should be uniquely identified by an <tref>IRI</tref>.</p>
+triple of the form (subject, type, type-iri).</p>
+
+<p>To be Linked Data, types MUST be uniquely identified by an
+ <tref>IRI</tref>.</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
@@ -923,7 +929,7 @@
<p>
A value with an associated datatype, also known as a
<tdef>typed literal</tdef>, is indicated by associating a literal with
- an IRI which indicates the typed literal's datatype. Typed literals may be
+ an IRI which indicates the literal's datatype. Typed literals may be
expressed in JSON-LD in three ways:
</p>
@@ -933,7 +939,7 @@
<li>By using a native JSON datatype.</li>
</ol>
-<p>The first example uses the <code>@coerce</code> keyword to express a
+<p>The first form uses the <code>@coerce</code> keyword to express a
typed literal:</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
@@ -955,7 +961,7 @@
-->
</pre>
-<p>The second example uses the expanded form for specifying objects:</p>
+<p>The second form uses the expanded form for specifying objects:</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
@@ -975,7 +981,8 @@
<code>2010-05-29T14:17:39+02:00</code> and the datatype of
<code>http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#dateTime</code>.</p>
-<p>The third example uses a built-in native JSON type, a <tref>number</tref>, to
+<p>The third form uses a built-in native JSON type, a
+ <tref>number</tref>, to
express a datatype:</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
@@ -1008,7 +1015,7 @@
<tref>array</tref>s. If a subject has multiple values for the same property, the author
MAY express each property as an <tref>array</tref>.</p>
-<p class="note">In JSON-LD, Multiple objects on a property are not ordered. This is because typically graphs
+<p class="note">In JSON-LD, multiple objects on a property are not ordered. This is because typically graphs
are not inherently ordered data structures. To see more on creating ordered collections
in JSON-LD, see <a href="#lists">Lists</a>.
</p>
@@ -1090,8 +1097,7 @@
<p>Expansion is the process of taking a JSON-LD document and applying a
context such that all IRI, datatypes, and literal values are expanded so
that the context is no longer necessary. JSON-LD document expansion
-is typically used when re-mapping JSON-LD documents to application-specific
-JSON documents or as a part of the <a href="#normalization">Normalization</a>
+is typically used as a part of the <a href="#normalization">Normalization</a>
process.</p>
<p>For example, assume the following JSON-LD input document:</p>
@@ -1099,8 +1105,6 @@
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
{
- "name": "Manu Sporny",
- "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
"@context":
{
"name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
@@ -1109,7 +1113,9 @@
{
"@iri": "homepage"
}
- }
+ },
+ "name": "Manu Sporny",
+ "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/"
}
-->
</pre>
@@ -1165,7 +1171,7 @@
"homepage": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/homepage",
"@coerce":
{
- "@iri": ["homepage"]
+ "@iri": "homepage"
}
}
-->
@@ -1178,8 +1184,6 @@
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
{
- "name": "Manu Sporny",
- "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
"@context":
{
"name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
@@ -1188,7 +1192,9 @@
{
"@iri": "homepage"
}
- }
+ },
+ "name": "Manu Sporny",
+ "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/"
}
-->
</pre>
@@ -1562,7 +1568,7 @@
automatically created if a subject is not specified using the
<code>@subject</code> keyword. However, authors may provide identifiers for
unlabeled nodes by using the special <code>_</code> (underscore) <tref>CURIE</tref>
-prefix.</p>
+prefix. This allows to reference the node locally within the document but not in an external document.</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
@@ -1639,8 +1645,6 @@
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
<!--
{
- "name": "Manu Sporny",
- "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
"@context":
{
"name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name",
@@ -1650,7 +1654,9 @@
{
"@iri": ["homepage"]
}
- }
+ },
+ "name": "Manu Sporny",
+ "homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/"
}
-->
</pre>
@@ -1658,7 +1664,7 @@
<p>The example below is the normalized form of the JSON-LD document above:</p>
<p class="note">Whitespace is used below to aid readability. The normalization
-algorithm for JSON-LD remove all unnecessary whitespace in the fully
+algorithm for JSON-LD removes all unnecessary whitespace in the fully
normalized form.</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
@@ -1697,8 +1703,8 @@
</p>
<section>
-<h3>JSONLDProcessor</h3>
-<dl title="[NoInterfaceObject] interface JSONLDProcessor" class="idl">
+<h3>JsonLDProcessor</h3>
+<dl title="[NoInterfaceObject] interface JsonLDProcessor" class="idl">
<dt>object expand()</dt>
<dd><a href="#expansion">Expands</a> the given <code>input</code>
@@ -1712,7 +1718,9 @@
<dl class="parameters">
<dt>object input</dt>
<dd>The JSON-LD object to copy and perform the expansion upon.</dd>
- <dt>JSONLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
+ <dt>object optional? context</dt>
+ <dd>An external context to use additionally to the context embedded in <code>input</code> when expanding the <code>input</code>.</dd>
+ <dt>JsonLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
<dd>A callback that is called whenever a processing error occurs on
the <code>input</code>.</dd>
</dl>
@@ -1727,9 +1735,9 @@
<dl class="parameters">
<dt>object input</dt>
<dd>The JSON-LD object to perform compaction on.</dd>
- <dt>object context</dt>
+ <dt>object optional? context</dt>
<dd>The base context to use when compacting the <code>input</code>.</dd>
- <dt>JSONLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
+ <dt>JsonLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
<dd>A callback that is called whenever a processing error occurs on
the given <code>input</code>.</dd>
</dl>
@@ -1751,7 +1759,7 @@
<dd>The frame to use when re-arranging the data.</dd>
<dt>object options</dt>
<dd>A set of options that will affect the framing algorithm.</dd>
- <dt>JSONLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
+ <dt>JsonLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
<dd>A callback that is called whenever a processing error occurs on
the given <code>input</code>.</dd>
</dl>
@@ -1766,7 +1774,9 @@
<dl class="parameters">
<dt>object input</dt>
<dd>The JSON-LD object to perform normalization upon.</dd>
- <dt>JSONLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
+ <dt>object optional? context</dt>
+ <dd>An external context to use additionally to the context embedded in <code>input</code> when expanding the <code>input</code>.</dd>
+ <dt>JsonLDProcessorCallback optional? callback</dt>
<dd>A callback that is called whenever a processing error occurs on
the given JSON-LD string.</dd>
</dl>
@@ -1779,12 +1789,14 @@
<dl class="parameters">
<dt>object input</dt>
<dd>The JSON-LD object to process when outputting triples.</dd>
- <dt>JSONLDTripleCallback tripleCallback</dt>
+ <dt>JsonLDTripleCallback tripleCallback</dt>
<dd>A callback that is called whenever a processing error occurs on
the given <code>input</code>.
<div class="issue">This callback should be aligned with the
RDF API.</div></dd>
- <dt>JSONLDProcessorCallback optional? parserCallback</dt>
+ <dt>object optional? context</dt>
+ <dd>An external context to use additionally to the context embedded in <code>input</code> when expanding the <code>input</code>.</dd>
+ <dt>JsonLDProcessorCallback optional? parserCallback</dt>
<dd>A callback that is called whenever a processing error occurs on
the given <code>input</code>.</dd>
</dl>
@@ -1794,11 +1806,11 @@
</section>
<section>
-<h3>JSONLDProcessorCallback</h3>
-<p>The JSONLDProcessorCallback is called whenever a processing error occurs
+<h3>JsonLDProcessorCallback</h3>
+<p>The JsonLDProcessorCallback is called whenever a processing error occurs
while processing the <tref>JSON-LD input</tref>.</p>
-<dl title="[NoInterfaceObject Callback] interface JSONLDProcessorCallback"
+<dl title="[NoInterfaceObject Callback] interface JsonLDProcessorCallback"
class="idl">
<dt>void error()</dt>
@@ -1812,11 +1824,11 @@
</section>
<section>
-<h3>JSONLDTripleCallback</h3>
-<p>The JSONLDTripleCallback is called whenever the processor generates a
+<h3>JsonLDTripleCallback</h3>
+<p>The JsonLDTripleCallback is called whenever the processor generates a
triple during the <code>triple()</code> call.</p>
-<dl title="[NoInterfaceObject Callback] interface JSONLDTripleCallback"
+<dl title="[NoInterfaceObject Callback] interface JsonLDTripleCallback"
class="idl">
<dt>void triple()</dt>
@@ -2030,7 +2042,7 @@
<h2>IRI Expansion</h2>
<p>Keys and some values are evaluated to produce an IRI. This section defines an algorithm for
transforming a value representing an IRI into an actual IRI.</p>
- <p>IRIs may be represented as an explicit string, or as a <tref>CURIE</tref>, as a value relative to <code>@base</code>
+ <p>IRIs may be represented as an explicit string, as a <tref>CURIE</tref>, or as a value relative to <code>@base</code>
or <code>@vocab</code>.</p>
<p>The algorithm for generating an IRI is:
<ol class="algorithm">
@@ -2039,7 +2051,7 @@
<li>If the <tref>active context</tref> contains a mapping for <em>prefix</em>, generate an IRI
by prepending the mapped prefix to the (possibly empty) suffix using textual concatenation. Note that an empty
suffix and no suffix (meaning the value contains no ':' string at all) are treated equivalently.</li>
- <li>If the IRI being processed is for a property (i.e., a key value in a <tref>JSON object</tref>, or a
+ <li>If the IRI being processed is for a property (i.e., a key's value in a <tref>JSON object</tref>, or a
value in a <code>@coerce</code> mapping) and the active context has a <code>@vocab</code> mapping,
join the mapped value to the suffix using textual concatenation.</li>
<li>If the IRI being processed is for a subject or object (i.e., not a property) and the active context has a <code>@base</code> mapping,
@@ -2069,7 +2081,7 @@
matched IRI in the <tref>active context</tref> concatenated with a
colon (:) character and the unmatched part of the string. If there is
more than one compacted IRI produced, the final value is the
- lexicographically least value of the entire set of compacted IRIs.</li>
+ shortest and lexicographically least value of the entire set of compacted IRIs.</li>
</ol>
</p>
</section>
@@ -3771,13 +3783,18 @@
-->
</pre>
+<p>Warning: This serialisation format does not allow to specify a <code>@context</code> because the document's data
+ structure is an array and not an object as in most other cases.</p>
+<p class="note">.
+</p>
+
</section>
<section>
<h2>Lists</h2>
<p>
- Because graphs do not describe ordering for links between nodes, multi-valued properties
- in JSON do not provide an ordering of the listed objects. For example, consider the following
+ Because graphs do not describe ordering for links between nodes, in contrast to plain JSON, multi-valued properties
+ in JSON-LD do not provide an ordering of the listed objects. For example, consider the following
simple document:
</p>
<pre class="example" data-transform="updateExample">
@@ -3792,7 +3809,8 @@
</pre>
<p>
This results in three triples being generated, each relating the subject to an individual
- object, with no inherent order. To address this issue, RDF-based languages, such as [[TURTLE]]
+ object, with no inherent order.</p>
+ <p>To address this issue, RDF-based languages, such as [[TURTLE]]
use the concept of an <code>rdf:List</code> (as described in [[RDF-SCHEMA]]). This uses a sequence
of unlabeled nodes with properties describing a value, a null-terminated next property. Without
specific syntactical support, this could be represented in JSON-LD as follows:
@@ -3853,6 +3871,7 @@
}
-->
</pre>
+ <p class="issue">There is an ongoing discussion about this issue. One of the <a href="https://github.com/json-ld/json-ld.org/issues/12">proposed solutions</a> is allowing to change the default behaviour so that arrays are considered as ordered lists by default.</p>
<section><h3 id="list-expansion">Expansion</h3>
<p class="issue">TBD.</p>
</section>
@@ -4012,7 +4031,7 @@
"vcard": "http://microformats.org/profile/hcard#vcard",
"url": "http://microformats.org/profile/hcard#url",
"fn": "http://microformats.org/profile/hcard#fn",
- "@coerce": { "xsd:anyURI": "url" }
+ "@coerce": { "@iri": "url" }
},
"@subject": "_:bnode1",
"@type": "vcard",
@@ -4184,6 +4203,7 @@
such as a Web server, the application MAY choose any format. If no
format is specified for a receiving application, the format MUST NOT
be assumed to take any particular form.</dd>
+ <div class="issue">It is currently <a href="https://github.com/json-ld/json-ld.org/issues/14"> being discussed to remove form=frame</a> from this specification as there are several issues with it.</div>
</dl>
</dd>
<dt>Encoding considerations:</dt>