NAME
XML::GRDDL - transform XML and XHTML to RDF
SYNOPSIS
High-level interface:
my $grddl = XML::GRDDL->new;
my $model = $grddl->data($xmldoc, $baseuri);
# $model is an RDF::Trine::Model
Low-level interface:
my $grddl = XML::GRDDL->new;
my @transformations = $grddl->discover($xmldoc, $baseuri);
foreach my $t (@transformations)
{
# $t is an XML::GRDDL::Transformation
my ($output, $mediatype) = $t->transform($xmldoc);
# $output is a string of type $mediatype.
}
DESCRIPTION
GRDDL is a W3C Recommendation for extracting RDF data from arbitrary XML
and XHTML via a transformation, typically written in XSLT. See
for more details.
This module implements GRDDL in Perl. It offers both a low level
interface, allowing you to generate a list of transformations associated
with the document being processed, and thus the ability to selectively
run the transformation; and a high-level interface where a single RDF
model is returned representing the union of the RDF graphs generated by
applying all available transformations.
Constructor
"XML::GRDDL->new"
The constructor accepts no parameters and returns an XML::GRDDL
object.
Methods
"$grddl->discover($xml, $base, %options)"
Processes the document to discover the transformations associated
with it. $xml is the raw XML source of the document, or an
XML::LibXML::Document object. ($xml cannot be "tag soup" HTML,
though you should be able to use HTML::HTML5::Parser to parse tag
soup into an XML::LibXML::Document.) $base is the base URI for
resolving relative references.
Returns a list of XML::GRDDL::Transformation objects.
Options include:
* force_rel - boolean; interpret XHTML rel="transformation" even
in the absence of the GRDDL profile.
* strings - boolean; return a list of plain strings instead of
blessed objects.
"$grddl->data($xml, $base, %options)"
Processes the document, discovers the transformations associated
with it, applies the transformations and merges the results into a
single RDF model. $xml and $base are as per "discover".
Returns an RDF::Trine::Model containing the data. Statement contexts
(a.k.a. named graphs / quads) are used to distinguish between data
from the result of each transformation.
Options include:
* force_rel - boolean; interpret XHTML rel="transformation" even
in the absence of the GRDDL profile.
* metadata - boolean; include provenance information in the
default graph (a.k.a. nil context).
"$grddl->ua( [$ua] )"
Get/set the user agent used for HTTP requests. $ua, if supplied,
must be an LWP::UserAgent.
Constants
These constants may be exported upon request.
"GRDDL_NS"
"XHTML_NS"
FEATURES
XML::GRDDL supports transformations written in XSLT 1.0, and in
RDF-EASE.
XML::GRDDL is a good HTTP citizen: Referer headers are included in
requests, and appropriate Accept headers supplied. To be an even better
citizen, I recommend changing the User-Agent header to advertise the
name of the application:
$grddl->ua->default_header(user_agent => 'MyApp/1.0 ');
Provenance information for GRDDL transformations is returned using the
GRDDL vocabulary at .
Certain XHTML profiles and XML namespaces known not to contain any
transformations, or to contain useless transformations are skipped. See
XML::GRDDL::Namespace and XML::GRDDL::Profile for details. In particular
profiles for RDFa and many Microformats are skipped, as
RDF::RDFa::Parser and HTML::Microformats will typically yield far
superior results.
BUGS
Please report any bugs to .
Known limitations:
* Recursive GRDDL doesn't work yet.
That is, the profile documents and namespace documents linked to
from your primary document cannot themselves rely on GRDDL.
SEE ALSO
XML::GRDDL::Transformation, XML::GRDDL::Namespace, XML::GRDDL::Profile,
XML::GRDDL::Transformation::RDF_EASE::Functional, XML::Saxon::XSLT2.
HTML::HTML5::Parser, RDF::RDFa::Parser, HTML::Microformats.
JSON::GRDDL.
.
.
This module is derived from Swignition
.
AUTHOR
Toby Inkster .
COPYRIGHT AND LICENCE
Copyright 2008-2012 Toby Inkster
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES
THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED
WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTIBILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.