swish-0.9.1.6: A semantic web toolkit.

Copyright(c) 2003, Graham Klyne, 2009 Vasili I Galchin, 2011, 2012, 2013 Douglas Burke
LicenseGPL V2
MaintainerDouglas Burke
Stabilityexperimental
PortabilityOverloadedStrings
Safe HaskellNone
LanguageHaskell98

Swish.QName

Description

This module defines an algebraic datatype for qualified names (QNames), which represents a URI as the combination of a namespace URI and a local component (LName), which can be empty.

Although RDF supports using IRIs, the use of URI here precludes this, which means that, for instance, LName only accepts a subset of valid characters. There is currently no attempt to convert from an IRI into a URI.

Synopsis

Documentation

data QName Source

A qualified name, consisting of a namespace URI and the local part of the identifier, which can be empty. The serialisation of a QName is formed by concatanating the two components.

Prelude> :set prompt "swish> "
swish> :set -XOverloadedStrings
swish> :m + Swish.QName
swish> let qn1 = "http://example.com/" :: QName
swish> let qn2 = "http://example.com/bob" :: QName
swish> let qn3 = "http://example.com/bob/fred" :: QName
swish> let qn4 = "http://example.com/bob/fred#x" :: QName
swish> let qn5 = "http://example.com/bob/fred:joe" :: QName
swish> map getLocalName [qn1, qn2, qn3, qn4, qn5]
["","bob","fred","x","fred:joe"]
swish> getNamespace qn1
http://example.com/
swish> getNamespace qn2
http://example.com/
swish> getNamespace qn3
http://example.com/bob/
swish> getNamespace qn4
http://example.com/bob/fred#

Instances

Eq QName Source

Equality is determined by a case sensitive comparison of the URI.

Ord QName Source

In 0.8.0.0 the ordering now uses the ordering defined in Network.URI.Ord rather than the Show instance. This should make no difference unless a password was included in the URI when using basic access authorization.

Show QName Source

The format used to display the URI is <uri>, and does not include the password if using basic access authorization.

IsString QName Source

This is not total since it will fail if the input string is not a valid URI.

FromRDFLabel QName Source

Converts from a Resource.

ToRDFLabel QName Source

Converts to a Resource.

data LName Source

A local name, which can be empty.

At present, the local name can not contain a space character and can only contain ascii characters (those that match isAscii).

In version 0.9.0.3 and earlier, the following characters were not allowed in local names: '#', ':', or '/' characters.

This is all rather experimental.

Instances

Eq LName Source 
Ord LName Source 
Show LName Source 
IsString LName Source

This is not total since attempting to convert a string containing invalid characters will cause an error.

emptyLName :: LName Source

The empty local name.

newLName :: Text -> Maybe LName Source

Create a local name.

getLName :: LName -> Text Source

Extract the local name.

newQName Source

Arguments

:: URI

Namespace

-> LName

Local component

-> QName 

Create a new qualified name with an explicit local component.

qnameFromURI Source

Arguments

:: URI

The URI will be deconstructed to find if it contains a local component.

-> Maybe QName

The failure case may be removed.

Create a new qualified name.

getNamespace :: QName -> URI Source

Return the URI of the namespace stored in the QName. This does not contain the local component.

getLocalName :: QName -> LName Source

Return the local component of the QName.

getQNameURI :: QName -> URI Source

Returns the full URI of the QName (ie the combination of the namespace and local components).

qnameFromFilePath :: FilePath -> IO QName Source

Convert a filepath to a file: URI stored in a QName. If the input file path is relative then the current working directory is used to convert it into an absolute path.

If the input represents a directory then it *must* end in the directory separator - so for Posix systems use "/foo/bar/" rather than "/foo/bar".

This has not been tested on Windows.