This document is also available in this non-normative format: diff to previous version
Copyright © 2010-2012 W3C ® ( MIT , ERCIM , Keio ), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability , trademark and document use rules apply.
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.
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
currently
several
independent
five
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 .
This section is non-normative.
JSON,
as
specified
in
[
RFC4627
],
is
a
simple
language
for
representing
data
on
the
Web.
Linked
Data
is
a
technique
for
creating
a
network
of
inter-connected
data
across
different
Web
documents
and
Web
sites.
A
document
in
this
data
network
is
typically
identified
using
an
In
general,
Linked
Data
has
four
properties:
1)
it
uses
IRI
IRIs
(Internationalized
Resource
Identifier).
A
software
program
can
typically
follow
an
IRI
just
like
you
follow
a
URL
by
putting
to
name
things;
2)
it
into
your
browser's
location
bar.
By
following
IRIs,
a
software
program
can
find
uses
HTTP
IRIs
for
those
names;
3)
the
name
IRIs
,
when
dereferenced,
provide
more
information
about
the
document
name;
and
4)
the
thing
s
that
the
document
describes.
data
expresses
links
to
data
on
other
Web
sites.
These
things
may
also
be
identified
using
IRI
s.
The
IRI
allows
a
software
program
properties
allow
data
published
on
the
Web
to
work
much
like
Web
pages
do
today.
One
can
start
at
one
document
piece
of
Linked
Data,
and
follow
the
links
to
other
documents
or
things
in
order
to
learn
more
about
all
pieces
of
the
documents
and
things
described
data
that
are
hosted
on
different
sites
across
the
Web.
JSON-LD
is
designed
as
a
lightweight
syntax
that
can
be
used
to
express
Linked
Data
.
in
JSON
[
RFC4627
].
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
inter-operable
interoperable
Web
services
and
when
storing
Linked
Data
in
JSON-based
document
storage
engines.
It
Since
JSON-LD
is
practical
and
designed
to
be
as
simple
as
possible,
utilizing
100%
compatible
with
JSON
the
large
number
of
JSON
parsers
and
libraries
available
today.
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
easily
add
meaning
by
simply
adding
serialize
an
RDF
graph
or
referencing
dataset
[
RDF-CONCEPTS
]
in
a
context.
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.
Finally,
the
format
is
intended
to
be
easy
to
parse,
efficient
to
generate,
and
can
operate
inside
of
devices
that
contain
very
little
memory.
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 ].
This section is non-normative.
A number of design goals were established before the creation of this markup language:
@context
and
@id
)
to
use
the
basic
functionality
in
JSON-LD.
JSON
provides
a
number
of
benefits
to
software
developers
that
need
to
serialize
data:
It
is
easy
for
humans
to
read
and
write.
It
is
easy
for
machines
to
parse
and
generate.
It
has
a
syntax
that
is
familiar
across
a
large
number
of
programming
languages.
It
is
capable
of
representing
many
different
types
of
data
using
two
universal
data
structures;
a
collection
of
key-value
pairs
and
lists.
JSON
has
become
a
very
popular
data-interchange
format
on
the
Web,
particularly
for
REST
-based
Web
Services.
Unfortunately,
it
has
a
number
of
short-comings
that
other
Web-native
data
formats
do
not
have:
There
is
no
standardized,
universal
identifier
mechanism
for
JSON
object
s.
The
meaning
of
the
keys
used
in
a
JSON
object
s
are
ambiguous
and
often
conflict
with
other
data
published
on
the
Web.
There
is
no
standardized
way
for
a
value
in
a
JSON
object
to
refer
to
a
JSON
object
on
a
different
site
on
the
Web.
A
developer
cannot
express
This
document
uses
the
language
associated
with
a
string
value
in
a
standardized
manner.
There
is
no
standard
mechanism
to
associate
datatypes
with
values
such
as
dates,
times,
weights,
and
distances.
There
is
no
facility
to
express
a
Web
of
information
(directed
graph),
such
following
terms
as
a
social
network,
defined
in
a
standardized
manner.
JSON-LD
is
a
web-native
standard,
is
100%
compatible
with
JSON,
provides
all
of
the
facilities
that
JSON
provides,
and
extends
the
language
to
provide
the
following
core
advantages:
A
universal
identifier
mechanism
for
JSON
object
s
via
the
use
of
IRI
[
RFC4627
s.
A
way
to
dis-ambiguate
the
keys
used
between
multiple
JSON
documents
by
mapping
them
to
IRI
s
via
a
context
.
A
mechanism
in
which
a
value
in
a
JSON
object
may
refer
to
a
JSON
object
on
a
different
site
on
the
Web.
The
ability
to
express
the
language
associated
with
a
string
value.
A
way
to
associate
datatypes
with
values
such
as
dates,
times,
weights,
and
distances.
A
facility
].
Refer
to
express
one
or
more
directed
graphs,
such
as
a
social
network,
in
a
single
document.
Developers
that
require
any
of
the
facilities
listed
above
will
find
JSON-LD
of
interest.
3.2
JSON-LD
Data
Model
Linked
Data
is
a
way
of
publishing
data
on
the
Web.
In
general,
Linked
Data
has
four
properties;
1)
It
uses
IRI
s
to
name
things
,
2)
It
uses
HTTP
IRI
s
for
those
names,
3)
The
name
links,
when
followed,
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
a
way
of
expressing
Linked
Data
on
the
Web.
The
JSON-LD
data
model
encapsulates
the
following
concepts:
The
JSON-LD
data
model
is
used
to
represent
linked
data
graph
s.
A
linked
data
graph
is
an
unordered
labeled
directed
graph,
where
each
node
is
a
subject
or
object
,
and
edges
are
labeled
using
properties
.
A
subject
is
any
node
in
a
linked
data
graph
with
at
least
one
outgoing
edge.
A
subject
should
JSON
Grammar
be
labeled
with
an
IRI
(an
Internationalized
Resource
Identifier
as
described
section
in
[
RFC3987
RFC4627
]).
An
object
is
a
node
in
a
linked
data
graph
with
at
least
one
incoming
edge.
An
object
may
be
labeled
with
an
IRI
or
a
label
that
is
not
an
IRI
such
as
plain
text,
internationalized
text,
or
a
strictly-typed
data
value.
A
node
may
be
a
subject
and
an
object
at
the
same
time.
A
property
is
the
label
on
an
edge
in
a
linked
data
graph
.
A
property
should
be
an
IRI
.
An
IRI
that
is
a
label
in
a
linked
data
graph
should
be
dereferencable
to
a
Linked
Data
document
describing
the
labeled
subject
,
property
or
object
.
Note
A
Linked
Data
document
does
not
necessarily
need
to
be
expressed
in
JSON-LD.
The
notion
of
Linked
Data
is
a
concept
independent
of
any
given
serialization
format.
Figure
1:
An
example
of
a
linked
data
graph.
There
are
a
number
of
best
practices
that
can
ensure
that
developers
will
generate
good
Linked
Data
]
for
the
Web.
JSON-LD
formalizes
those
techniques
by
providing
a
mechanism
to
map
JSON
data,
i.e.,
keys
and
values,
to
IRI
s.
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
desires
to
transform
their
data
into
Linked
Data
.
3.3
General
Terminology
The
following
is
an
explanation
of
the
general
terminology
used
in
this
document.
Many
of
the
terms
should
be
familiar
to
developers
that
have
used
JSON:
formal
definitions.
@context
where
the
@id
of
the
value,
is
@value
,
@list
,
or
@set
JSON-LD specifies a number of syntax tokens and keywords that are a core part of the language:
@context
@context
keyword
is
described
in
detail
in
the
section
titled
@graph
Used
to
explicitly
label
a
linked
data
graph
.
This
keyword
is
described
in
4.11
Named
Graphs
.
@id
@value
@language
@type
@container
@list
@set
@vocab
@annotation
@vocab
@type
with
a
common
prefix
IRI
@graph
:
For the avoidance of doubt, all keys, keywords , and values in JSON-LD are case-sensitive.
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 ].
In
JSON-LD,
a
context
is
used
to
map
term
s,
terms
,
i.e.,
properties
with
associated
values
in
an
JSON
document,
to
IRI
s.
A
term
is
a
short
word
that
expands
to
an
IRI
.
Term
s
may
be
defined
as
any
valid
JSON
string
other
than
a
JSON-LD
keyword
IRIs
.
To
avoid
forward-compatibility
issues,
term
s
starting
with
an
@
character
should
not
be
used
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.
The
Web
uses
IRIs
for
unambiguous
identification.
The
idea
is
that
these
term
terms
s
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
term
terms
s
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.
The
value
of
a
term
mapping
must
be
either;
1)
a
simple
string
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
lexical
form
use
of
an
absolute
IRI
or
2)
compact
IRI
,
or
3)
an
JSON
object
empty
terms
containing
an
@id
,
@type
,
@language
,
or
(
@container
""
keyword
(all
other
keywords
)
is
discouraged
as
not
all
programming
languages
are
ignored
by
a
JSON-LD
processor).
able
to
handle
empty
property
names.
These
Linked
Data
In
a
JSON-LD
document,
the
mapping
between
term
terms
s
are
and
IRIs
is
typically
collected
in
a
context
document
definition
that
would
look
something
like
this:
{ "@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:
{ "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:
{
"@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
type,
language
or
additional
information
for
certain
term
s
as
well
as
other
processing
instructions
for
the
JSON-LD
processor.
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.
When
importing
a
@context
value
from
an
external
JSON-LD
context
document,
any
extra
information
Information
contained
outside
of
the
@context
value
must
be
discarded.
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
processed
when
understood
even
in
the
absence
of
a
JSON-LD
processor
does
not
have
access
connection
to
the
Web.
{
"@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
definition
object
is
defined.
A
node
definition
In
particular,
a
JSON-LD
document
may
specify
multiple
contexts,
using
an
array
,
which
is
processed
define
more
than
one
context,
as
in
order.
the
following
example:
[ { "@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
term
terms
s
must
be
are
overridden
using
a
last-defined-overrides
mechanism.
{ "@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
.
Note
If
a
term
is
re-defined
within
a
context,
all
previous
rules
associated
with
the
previous
definition
are
removed.
A
If
that
term
defined
in
a
previous
context
must
be
removed,
if
it
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
definition
object
are
referred
to
as
local
context
s.
contexts
.
Setting
the
context
to
null
effectively
resets
the
active
context
to
an
empty
context.
The
active
context
refers
to
the
accumulation
of
local
context
contexts
s
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:
{ "@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" }
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.
If
a
set
of
term
terms
s
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
meaningful
and
unambiguous,
unambiguous
like
this:
{ "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 .
The
example
above
does
not
use
the
@id
keyword
to
identify
the
node
being
described
above.
This
type
of
node
is
called
an
unlabeled
a
blank
node
.
It
is
advised
that
all
nodes
described
node
objects
in
JSON-LD
are
given
unique
identifiers
identified
by
IRIs
via
the
@id
keyword
unless
the
data
is
not
intended
to
be
linked
to
from
other
data
sets.
IRIs
(Internationalized
Resource
Identifiers)
are
fundamental
to
Linked
Data
as
that
is
how
most
nodes
s
and
all
properties
are
identified.
IRI
IRIs
s
can
be
expressed
in
a
variety
of
different
ways
in
JSON-LD.
An
IRI
(an
Internationalized
Resource
Identifier)
is
described
in
[
RFC3987
])
and
the
use
with
JSON-LD
conforms
to
the
definition
of
IRI
in
[
RDF-CONCEPTS
].
JSON-LD:
@vocab
mapping
in
the
active
context
also
terms
without
an
explicit
mapping
in
the
active
context
are
expanded
to
an
IRI
@id
or
@type
.
@id
.
IRIs
may
be
represented
as
an
absolute
IRI
,
or
a
relative
IRI
,
a
term
,
a
compact
IRI
,
or
as
a
value
relative
to
@vocab
.
.
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
IRI
IRIs
s
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:
{
...
"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 :
{ "@context": { "name": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/name" ... }, "name": "Manu Sporny", "status": "trollin'", ... }
Term
Terms
s
are
case
sensitive,
and
must
be
matched
using
a
case-sensitive
comparison.
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
have
any
machine-readable,
semantic
meaning.
expand
to
unambiguous
identifiers.
Prefix
Prefixes
es
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
:
{ "@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
4.1
6.1
Compact
IRIs
for
more
details.
If
the
@vocab
is
set,
all
keys
that
do
not
match
a
term
or
a
prefix
are
It
is
often
common
that
all
types
and
properties
come
from
the
same
vocabulary.
JSON-LD's
@vocab
keyword
allows
to
set
a
base
IRI
common
prefix
to
be
used
for
all
properties
and
types
that
that
do
not
neither
match
a
term
,
nor
a
prefix
,
compact
IRI
or
an
absolute
IRI
(i.e.,
do
not
contain
a
colon).
The
@vocab
mapping
must
have
a
value
of
a
simple
string
with
the
lexical
form
of
an
absolute
IRI
.
{ "@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:
{
...
"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
reference
object
.
This
facility
may
also
be
used
to
link
to
another
node
definition
object
using
a
mechanism
called
embedding
,
which
is
covered
in
the
section
titled
4.10
6.10
Embedding
.
If
type
coercion
rules
are
specified
in
the
@context
for
a
particular
term
or
property
IRI
,
an
IRI
is
generated:
{
"@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
processed
by
a
generating
the
JSON-LD
Processor.
graph
.
To
be
able
to
externally
reference
nodes
in
a
graph,
it
is
important
that
each
node
has
an
unambiguous
identifier.
IRI
IRIs
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
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
:
{ "@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
.
A
JSON
object
used
to
define
property
values
is
called
a
node
definition
.
Node
definitions
do
not
require
an
@id
.
A
node
definition
that
does
not
contain
an
@id
property
defines
properties
of
an
unlabeled
Once
defined,
the
node
.
Node
definitions
may
's
unique
identifier
can
be
spread
among
different
used
to
refer
to
it
from
other
parts
of
a
the
document
or
even
between
different
documents.
Note
To
ensure
the
best
possible
performance,
when
possible,
it
is
a
best
practice
to
put
JSON-LD
keyword
s,
such
as
@id
and
@context
before
other
key-value
pairs
in
a
JSON
object
.
However,
keys
in
from
external
documents,
using
a
JSON
node
object
are
not
ordered,
so
processors
must
not
depend
on
key
ordering.
If
keywords
are
not
listed
first,
processors
have
to
save
each
key-value
pair
until
at
least
the
@context
and
the
that
only
contains
an
@id
are
processed.
Not
specifying
those
keywords
first
creates
a
memory
and
complexity
burden
for
low-memory
footprint
processors,
forcing
them
to
use
more
memory
and
computing
cycles
than
necessary.
key:
{ "@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" } ] } }
The
type
of
a
particular
node
can
be
specified
using
the
@type
keyword
.
To
be
considered
In
Linked
Data
,
types
must
be
are
uniquely
identified
by
with
an
IRI
.
{ ... "@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:
{ ... "@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
:
{
"@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"
}
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:
{ "@context": { ... "@language": "ja" }, "name": "花澄", "occupation": "科学者" }
The
example
above
would
associate
the
ja
language
code
with
the
two
string
strings
s
花澄
and
科学者
.
Languages
must
be
well-formed
language
tags
according
to
codes
are
defined
in
[
BCP47
].
It
is
possible
to
override
the
default
language
by
using
the
an
expanded
form
of
a
value:
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:
value
:
{ "@context": { ... "@language": "ja" }, "name": { "@value": "Frank" }, "occupation": { "@value": "Ninja", "@language": "en" }, "speciality": "手裏剣" }
Please
note
that
language
associations
must
can
only
be
applied
to
plain
literal
string
s.
strings
.
That
is,
typed
value
values
s
or
values
that
are
subject
to
4.6
6.6
Type
Coercion
won't
cannot
be
language
tagged.
To
clear
the
default
language
for
a
subtree,
@language
can
be
set
to
null
in
a
local
context
as
follows:
{
"@context": {
...
"@language": "ja"
},
"name": "花澄",
"details": {
"@context": {
"@language": null
},
"occupation": "Ninja"
}
}
JSON-LD
allows
one
to
associate
language
information
with
term
s.
terms
.
See
4.5
6.5
Expanded
Term
Definition
for
more
details.
A
JSON-LD
document
is
first,
and
foremost,
a
JSON
document
(as
defined
in
[
RFC4627
]),
and
any
syntactically
correct
JSON
document
must
be
processed
by
a
conforming
JSON-LD
processor.
]).
However,
JSON-LD
describes
a
specific
syntax
to
use
for
expressing
Linked
Data.
This
includes
the
use
of
specific
keywords,
as
identified
in
3.4
3.2
Syntax
Tokens
and
Keywords
for
expressing
node
definitions
objects
,
values,
and
the
context
.
See
A.
B.
JSON-LD
Grammar
for
authoring
guidelines
and
a
BNF
description
of
JSON-LD.
guidelines.
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.
Term
Terms
s
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
term
terms
s
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
term
s,
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
IRI
IRIs
s
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.
This
effectively
means
that
every
term
containing
a
colon
will
be
interpreted
by
a
JSON-LD
processor
as
an
IRI
.
Consider the following example:
{ "@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:
{ "@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" }
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:
@type
keyword
when
defining
a
term
within
a
@context
section.
The
first
example
uses
the
@type
keyword
to
associate
a
type
with
a
particular
term
in
the
@context
:
{
"@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:
{
"@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
an
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.
{ ... "@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
.
A
string
with
an
associated
language,
also
known
as
a
language-tagged
string
,
,
is
indicated
by
associating
a
string
with
an
a
language
code
as
defined
in
[
BCP47
].
Language-tagged
strings
may
be
expressed
in
JSON-LD
in
four
ways:
@language
keyword
within
a
@context
section.
@language
keyword
when
defining
a
term
within
a
@context
section.
term
is
defined
with
a
@container
keyword
@language
@context
section.
The
first
example
uses
the
@language
keyword
to
associate
a
type
with
a
particular
term
in
the
@context
:
{
"@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:
{
"@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
map
maps
s
may
be
utilized.
{ "@context": { "title": {"@id": "http://purl.org/dc/terms/title" "@container": "@language""@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
.
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
link
relation.
The
referenced
document
must
have
a
top-level
node
describedby
http://www.w3.org/ns/json-ld#context
definition
object
.
The
@context
subtree
within
that
object
is
added
to
the
top-level
node
definition
object
of
the
referencing
document.
If
an
array
is
at
the
top-level
of
the
referencing
document
and
its
items
are
node
definitions
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:
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.
Within
a
context
definition,
term
terms
s
may
be
defined
using
an
expanded
notation
term
definition
to
allow
for
additional
information
associated
with
the
term
to
be
specified
(see
also
4.6
6.6
Type
Coercion
and
4.9
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.
The
value
of
the
@id
key
must
be
either
key,
and
a
term
,
a
compact
IRI
,
or
an
absolute
IRI
.
Such
an
object
is
called
a
node
reference
.
as
value.
{ "@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
4.6
6.6
Type
Coercion
,
4.9
6.9
Sets
and
Lists
),
,
or
to
associate
language
information
with
a
term
as
shown
in
the
following
example:
{ "@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.
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.
context
.
This
mechanism
is
mainly
used
to
associate
type
or
language
information
with
a
compact
IRI
or
an
absolute
IRI
.
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.
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
IRI
IRIs
s
to
term
s.
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
4.5
6.5
Expanded
Term
Definition
using
the
@type
key.
The
value
of
this
key
represents
a
type
IRI
and
must
take
the
form
of
a
term
,
compact
IRI
expands
to
an
,
absolute
IRI
,
or
.
Alternatively,
the
keyword
@id
.
Specifying
@id
indicates
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
JSON-LD
processor
will
be
able
to
determine
the
proper
expansion
for
xsd:integer
.
definition.
The
example
below
demonstrates
how
a
JSON-LD
author
can
coerce
values
to
typed
value
s,
values
,
IRIs
and
lists.
{ "@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
example
markup
shown
above
would
generate
the
following
Turtle:
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:
{ "@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": , "foaf:homepage": ["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
.
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.
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:
{ "@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
once,
but
have
that
maps
to
multiple
properties
in
the
JSON-LD
processor
expand
the
single
statement
into
multiple
statements.
graph
.
This
method
can
be
accomplished
by
using
the
following
markup
pattern:
{ "@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
,
a
JSON-LD
processor
will
internally
transform
the
document
above
into
is
equivalent
to
the
following
set
of
statements:
following:
Subject | Property | Object |
---|---|---|
http://example.com/book | http://purl.org/dc/terms/title |
The
Count
of
Monte
|
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 |
In
general,
normal
IRI
expansion
rules
apply
anywhere
an
IRI
is
expected
(see
3.7
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
value
s:
{ "@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.
Term
Terms
s
may
also
be
used
when
defining
the
IRI
of
another
term
:
{ "@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.
{ "@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
JSON-LD
processor
will
derive
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 :
{
"@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
must
also
needs
to
be
used
in
the
JSON-LD
document.
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,
a
JSON-LD
processor
will
use
direct
string
comparison
when
looking
up
term
terms
s
are
looked
up
in
a
context
using
direct
string
comparison
before
it
applies
the
prefix
lookup
mechanism.
mechanism
is
applied.
The
only
exception
for
using
terms
in
the
context
is
that
they
must
not
be
used
in
a
circular
manner.
definitions
are
not
allowed.
That
is,
a
definition
of
term-1
must
not
cannot
depend
on
the
definition
of
term-2
if
term-2
also
depends
on
term-1
.
For
example,
the
following
context
definition
is
illegal:
{
"@context":
{
"term1": "term2:foo",
"term2": "term1:bar"
},
...
}
A
JSON-LD
author
can
express
multiple
values
in
a
compact
way
by
using
array
s.
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:
{
...
"@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:
{
"@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:
{
...
"@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
:
{ "@context": { ... "nick": { "@id": "http://xmlns.com/foaf/0.1/nick", "@container": "@list" } }, ... "@id": "http://example.org/people#joebob", "nick": [ "joe", "bob", "jaybee" ], ... }
List
of
lists
are
not
allowed
in
this
version
of
JSON-LD.
If
a
list
of
lists
is
detected,
a
JSON-LD
processor
will
throw
an
exception.
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
that
must
be
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
4.15
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.
The
use
of
@container
in
the
body
of
a
JSON-LD
document,
i.e.,
outside
@context
must
be
ignored
document
has
no
meaning
and
is
not
allowed
by
the
JSON-LD
processors.
grammar
(see
B.
JSON-LD
Grammar
).
Embedding
is
a
JSON-LD
feature
that
allows
an
author
to
use
node
definitions
objects
as
property
values.
This
is
a
commonly
used
mechanism
for
creating
a
parent-child
relationship
between
two
node
s.
nodes
.
The example shows two nodes related by a property from the first node:
{ ... "name": "Manu Sporny", "knows": { "@type": "Person", "name": "Gregg Kellogg", } ... }
A
node
definition
object
,
like
the
one
used
above,
may
be
used
in
any
value
position
in
the
body
of
a
JSON-LD
document.
The
@graph
keyword
At
times,
it
is
used
necessary
to
express
make
statements
about
a
set
of
JSON-LD
node
definition
graph
s
that
may
not
be
directly
related
to
one
another
through
itself,
rather
than
just
a
property.
The
mechanism
may
also
be
used
where
embedding
is
not
desirable
to
the
application.
For
example:
{
"@context": ...,
"":
[
{
"@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
single
node
definition
references
the
other.
Using
the
@graph
keyword
allows
multiple
resources
to
be
defined
within
an
array
,
and
allows
the
use
of
a
shared
context
.
When
used
in
This
can
be
done
by
grouping
a
JSON
object
set
of
nodes
that
is
not
otherwise
a
node
definition
,
this
describes
resources
in
the
default
graph
.
This
is
equivalent
to
using
multiple
node
definitions
in
array
and
defining
the
@context
within
each
node
definition
:
{
"@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"
}
]
JSON-LD
allows
you
to
name
things
on
the
Web
by
assigning
an
@id
@graph
to
them,
which
is
typically
an
IRI
keyword
.
This
notion
extends
to
the
ability
to
identify
graphs
in
the
same
manner.
A
developer
may
also
name
data
expressed
using
the
@graph
keyword
by
pairing
it
with
an
@id
keyword
.
This
enables
the
developer
to
make
statements
about
a
linked
data
graph
itself,
rather
than
just
a
single
node
.
as
shown
in
the
following
example:
{ "@context": {"asOf": "http://purl.org/net/provenance/ns#accessedResource","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","asOf": { "@value": "2012-04-09", "@type": "xsd:date" },"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
linked
data
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
property,
which
specifies
when
the
asOf
generatedAt
information
graph
was
retrieved
from
the
Web.
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 |
|
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:
{
"@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
:
[ { "@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" } ]
At
times,
it
becomes
necessary
to
be
able
to
express
information
without
being
able
to
specify
the
node.
Typically,
this
This
type
of
node
is
called
an
unlabeled
node
or
a
blank
node
(see
[
RDF-CONCEPTS
]
(see
Section
3.4:
Blank
Nodes
).
of
[
RDF-CONCEPTS
]).
In
JSON-LD,
unlabeled
blank
node
identifiers
are
automatically
created
if
a
node
is
not
specified
using
the
@id
keyword
.
However,
authors
may
provide
identifiers
for
unlabeled
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
unlabeled
blank
node
identifier
is
scoped
to
the
document
in
which
it
is
used.
{
...
"@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
unlabeled
blank
node
.
If
a
developer
finds
that
they
refer
to
the
unlabeled
blank
node
more
than
once,
they
should
consider
naming
the
node
using
a
de-referenceable
dereferenceable
IRI
so
that
it
can
also
be
referenced
also
from
other
documents.
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
.
{ "@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.
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.
{ "@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 |
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.
{ "@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.
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:
{ "@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:
[ { "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
4.15
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:
[ { "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:
{ "@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:
{ "@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
4.14
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,
along
with
another
JSON-LD
API
technique
called
framing
,
mechanism
allows
the
developer
to
re-shape
the
incoming
JSON
data
into
a
format
that
is
optimized
for
their
application.
JSON-LD
is
an
attempt
to
formalize
a
normative
grammar
serialization
format
for
JSON-LD.
This
appendix
restates
Linked
Data
based
on
JSON.
It
is
therefore
important
to
distinguish
between
the
syntactic
conventions
described
syntax,
which
is
defined
by
JSON
in
the
previous
sections
more
formally.
[
RFC4627
],
and
JSON-LD's
data
model
which
is
defined
as
follows:
_:
.
In
contrast
to
the
RDF
data
model
as
described
defined
in
[
RFC4627
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
introduces
a
number
of
keywords
of
the
form
'
@
'
followed
documents
may
contain
data
that
cannot
be
represented
by
the
data
model
defined
above.
Unless
otherwise
specified,
such
data
is
ignored
when
a
set
of
one
or
more
lower
case
alphabetic
characters
(
@[a-z]+
).
JSON-LD
documents
should
document
is
being
processed.
This
means,
e.g.,
that
properties
which
are
not
define
terms
beginning
with
'
@
'.
(See
mapped
to
an
IRI
or
blank
node
will
be
ignored.
Figure 1: An illustration of JSON-LD's data model.
This
section
is
an
attempt
to
formalize
a
complete
definition
of
JSON-LD
keywords).
normative
grammar
for
JSON-LD.
This appendix restates the syntactic conventions described in the previous sections more formally.
The
JSON-LD
context
allows
keywords
to
be
aliased
within
the
active
context
.
6.13
Aliasing
Keywords
).
Whenever
a
keyword
is
discussed,
discussed
in
this
is
grammar,
the
statements
also
understood
to
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
is
either
must
be
a
valid
JSON
document
as
described
in
[
RFC4627
].
A
JSON-LD
document
must
be
a
single
node
definition
object
or
a
JSON
array
containing
a
set
of
one
or
more
node
definitions
objects
.
A
node
definition
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:
@value
,
@list
,
@annotation
,
or
@set
keywords,
or
@graph
keyword
and
is
the
top-most
JSON
Object
in
the
JSON-LD
document.
A
node
object
must
be
a
JSON
object
containing
that
contains
one
or
more
key-value
pairs.
Keys
are
must
either
be
IRI
s,
IRIs
,
compact
IRI
s,
IRIs
,
term
terms
s
defined
within
valid
in
the
active
context
,
or
one
of
the
following
keywords:
keywords
:
@context
,
@graph
,
@id
,
or
@type
If
the
node
definition
object
contains
the
@context
key,
its
value
must
be
one
of
the
following:
If
the
node
definition
object
contains
the
@id
key,
it's
its
value
must
be
a
string
having
the
lexical
form
of
an
IRI
,
a
compact
IRI
(including
unlabeled
blank
node
identifiers
),
or
a
term
defined
in
the
active
context
expanding
into
an
IRI
or
an
unlabeled
a
blank
node
identifier
.
{
"@context": "http://json-ld.org/contexts/person.jsonld",
,
"name": "Manu Sporny",
"homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
"depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}
See
5.4
Node
Identifiers
,
6.1
Compact
IRIs
,
and
6.12
Identifying
Blank
Nodes
for
further
discussion
on
@id
values.
If
the
node
definition
object
contains
the
@type
key,
it's
its
value
must
be
either
a
string
having
the
lexical
form
of
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.
A
JSON-LD
processor
should
process
non-conforming
documents
having
@type
values
including
node
definition
or
node
reference
entries
but
must
discard
everything
except
for
the
value
of
the
@id
key.
{
"@context": "http://json-ld.org/contexts/person.jsonld",
"@id": "http://manu.sporny.org/i/public",
,
"name": "Manu Sporny",
"homepage": "http://manu.sporny.org/",
"depiction": "http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/manusporny"
}
See
3.9
5.5
Specifying
the
Type
for
further
discussion
on
@type
values.
If
the
node
definition
object
contains
the
@graph
key,
it's
its
value
must
be
a
node
definition
object
or
an
array
of
zero
or
more
node
definitions
objects
.
If
the
node
definition
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.
As
a
special
case,
if
the
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
definition
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
definitions
objects
.
A
JSON-LD
document
must
not
contain
any
keyword
or
alias
that
expands
to
another
keyword.
Other
keys
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
may
must
be
any
one
of
the
following:
A
JSON
object
term
is
a
short-hand
string
containing
only
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
@id
@
(or
an
alias
for
character
as
future
versions
of
JSON-LD
may
introduce
additional
keywords
.
Furthermore,
the
use
of
empty
terms
(
)
is
@id
""
a
node
reference
discouraged
as
not
all
programming
languages
are
able
to
handle
empty
property
names.
See
5.1
The
Context
and
not
a
node
definition
5.3
IRIs
for
further
discussion
on
mapping
terms
to
IRIs
.
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
definition
object
if
the
term
is
defined
with
@container
set
to
@language
.
The
keys
of
a
language
map
must
be
a
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.
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.
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,
or
an
alias
for
the
@value
value
key.
It
may
also
contain
the
a
@type
or
a
@language
keys,
or
their
respective
keyword
aliases.
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
must
not
contain
both
the
that
contains
a
@language
@type
and
key
is
called
an
expanded
typed
value
.
An
expanded
value
that
contains
a
@type
@language
keys.
key
is
called
an
expanded
language-tagged
string
.
The
value
of
associated
with
the
@value
key,
or
its
alias,
key
must
be
either
a
string
,
number
,
true
,
or
false
or
null
.
If
an
expanded
value
contains
a
@language
key,
it
must
not
contain
any
other
key
except
@value
.
The
value
of
associated
with
the
@language
key
must
have
the
lexical
form
described
in
[
BCP47
],
or
be
null
.
If
an
expanded
The
value
contains
a
associated
with
the
@type
@annotation
key,
it
key
must
not
contain
any
other
key
except
@value
.
be
a
string
.
The
value
of
associated
with
the
@type
key
must
be
a
term
,
a
compact
IRI
,
an
absolute
IRI
,
or
null
.
See
4.2
6.2
Typed
Values
and
4.3
6.3
Language-tagged
Strings
for
a
further
discussion
of
more
information
on
expanded
values
.
A
list
represents
an
ordered
set
of
values.
A
set
is
represents
an
unordered
set
of
values.
Unless
otherwise
specified
(typically
through
the
use
of
a
JSON
object
list
having
only
),
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
keyword
.
Its
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
an
array
a
JSON
object
of
any
of
that
contains
a
single
key-value
pair
where
the
following:
key
is
@list
.
A
set
is
must
be
a
JSON
object
having
only
that
contains
a
single
key-value
pair
where
the
key
is
@set
.
keyword
.
Its
In both cases, the value associated with the key must be an array of any of the following:
See
4.9
6.9
Sets
and
Lists
for
a
further
discussion
of
on
List
and
Set
Values.
A
context
definition
is
defines
a
local
context
in
a
node
object
.
A
context
definition
must
be
a
JSON
object
containing
one
or
more
key-value
pairs.
Keys
are
non-keyword
strings
must
either
be
terms
or
the
@language
or
@vocab
keywords
.
A
context
definition
should
not
contain
any
keys
having
the
lexical
form
of
keyword
other
than
@language
or
@vocab
.
If
the
context
definition
has
a
@language
key,
the
its
value
must
have
the
lexical
form
described
in
[
BCP47
]
or
be
null
.
If
the
context
definition
has
a
@vocab
key,
the
its
value
must
have
the
lexical
form
of
absolute
IRI
or
be
null
.
Other
keys
are
term
Term
definitions.
Their
values
must
be
either
a
string
,
null
,
or
a
JSON
object
having
the
form
of
an
expanded
term
definition
(see
4.5
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.
All
values
associated
with
@id
must
expand
to
an
absolute
IRI
.
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
,
it
its
value
must
be
a
string
having
the
lexical
form
of
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
,
it
its
value
must
be
a
string
having
the
lexical
form
of
an
absolute
IRI
,
a
compact
IRI
,
or
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
,
the
its
value
must
have
the
lexical
form
described
in
[
BCP47
]
or
be
null
.
If
the
expanded
term
definition
contains
the
@container
keyword
,
the
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
JSON
object
whose
keys
are
string
s
that
are
[
BCP47
]
language
identifiers.
The
values
associated
with
each
[
BCP47
map
.
If
the
value
is
@annotation
,
when
the
term
]
language
string
is
used
outside
of
the
@context
,
the
associated
value
must
be
a
string
or
an
array
annotation
map
.
Terms
must
not
be
used
in
a
circular
manner.
That
is,
the
definition
of
string
s.
a
term
cannot
depend
on
the
definition
of
another
term
if
that
other
term
also
depends
on
the
first
term.
See
3.5
5.1
The
Context
and
4.5
6.5
Expanded
Term
Definition
for
a
further
discussion
of
on
contexts.
This
section
is
non-normative.
Issue
157
The
intent
of
the
Working
Group
and
the
Editors
of
this
specification
is
to
eventually
align
terminology
used
in
this
document
with
the
terminology
used
in
the
RDF
Concepts
document
data
model,
as
outlined
in
[
RDF-CONCEPTS
]
to
the
extent
to
which
it
makes
sense
to
do
so.
In
general,
if
there
],
is
an
analogue
to
terminology
used
in
this
document
in
the
RDF
Concepts
document,
the
preference
is
to
use
the
terminology
in
the
RDF
Concepts
document.
JSON-LD
is
a
specification
abstract
syntax
for
representing
Linked
Data
in
JSON.
A
common
way
a
directed
graph
of
working
with
Linked
Data
information.
It
is
through
RDF
,
a
subset
of
JSON-LD's
data
model
with
a
few
additional
constraints.
The
differences
between
the
Resource
Description
Framework.
RDF
two
data
models
are:
Summarized
these
differences
mean
that
JSON-LD
is
capable
of
serializing
any
RDF
graph,
graph
or
dataset
and
performing
full
RDF
to
most,
but
not
all,
JSON-LD
documents
can
be
transformed
to
RDF
round-tripping.
RDF.
A
complete
description
of
how
JSON-LD
maps
to
RDF
and
the
algorithms
detailing
how
one
can
to
convert
from
RDF
to
JSON-LD
and
from
JSON-LD
to
RDF
are
is
included
in
the
JSON-LD
API
[
JSON-LD-API
]
specification.
Even
though
JSON-LD
allows
properties
to
be
BNodes,
while
serializes
RDF
does
not.
Expressing
properties
datasets,
it
can
also
be
used
as
BNodes
in
JSON-LD
a
RDF
graph
source.
In
that
case,
a
consumer
must
only
becomes
an
issue
(and
could
raise
an
exception)
when
it
is
transformed
use
the
default
graph
and
ignore
all
named
graphs.
This
allows
servers
to
RDF.
expose
data
in,
e.g.,
both
Turtle
and
JSON-LD
using
content
negotiation.
Publishers
supporting
both
dataset
and
graph
syntaxes
have
to
ensure
that
the
JSON-LD
primary
data
model
is
silent
on
the
topic
of
unlabeled
nodes
.
Nevertheless,
this
specification
allows
for
the
expression
of
unlabeled
nodes
,
as
most
graph-based
data
sets
on
stored
in
the
Web
contain
a
number
of
associated
nodes
default
graph
to
enable
consumers
that
are
do
not
named
support
datasets
to
process
the
information.
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
thus
Microdata.
These
sections
are
not
directly
de-referenceable.
merely
provided
as
evidence
that
JSON-LD
is
very
flexible
in
what
it
can
express
across
different
Linked
Data
approaches.
This section is non-normative.
The following are examples of converting RDF expressed in [ TURTLE-TR ] into JSON-LD.
This section is non-normative.
The
JSON-LD
context
has
direct
equivalents
for
the
Turtle
@prefix
declaration:
@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/> .
{ "@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/" } }
JSON-LD
has
no
equivalent
for
the
Turtle
@base
declaration.
Both
Turtle
and
JSON-LD
allow
embedding,
although
Turtle
only
allows
embedding
of
unlabeled
blank
nodes
.
@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" ] .
{ "@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" } }
Both JSON-LD and Turtle can represent sequential lists of values.
@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" ) .
{ "@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" ] } }
The following example describes three people with their respective names and homepages.
<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.
{ "@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" } ] }
The following example uses a simple Microformats hCard example to express how the Microformat is represented in JSON-LD.
<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/
.
{ "@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" }
The microdata example below expresses book information as a microdata Work item.
<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 .
[ { "@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" } ]
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.
form
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
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.
application/json
MIME
media
type.
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.
Fragment
identifiers
used
with
application/ld+json
resources
may
identify
a
node
in
the
linked
data
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.
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.