Lab Solutions: Difference between revisions
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# The turtle format has the purpose of being more readable for humans. | # The turtle format has the purpose of being more readable for humans. | ||
print(g.serialize(format="turtle" | print(g.serialize(format="turtle")) | ||
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Revision as of 12:02, 1 February 2022
This page will be updated with Python examples related to the lectures and labs. We will add more examples after each lab has ended. The first examples will use Python's RDFlib. We will introduce other relevant libraries later.
Getting started
Printing the triples of the Graph in a readable way
# The turtle format has the purpose of being more readable for humans.
print(g.serialize(format="turtle"))
Coding Tasks Lab 1
from rdflib import Graph, Namespace, URIRef, BNode, Literal
from rdflib.namespace import RDF, FOAF, XSD
g = Graph()
ex = Namespace("http://example.org/")
g.add((ex.Cade, ex.married, ex.Mary))
g.add((ex.France, ex.capital, ex.Paris))
g.add((ex.Cade, ex.age, Literal("27", datatype=XSD.integer)))
g.add((ex.Mary, ex.age, Literal("26", datatype=XSD.integer)))
g.add((ex.Mary, ex.interest, ex.Hiking))
g.add((ex.Mary, ex.interest, ex.Chocolate))
g.add((ex.Mary, ex.interest, ex.Biology))
g.add((ex.Mary, RDF.type, ex.Student))
g.add((ex.Paris, RDF.type, ex.City))
g.add((ex.Paris, ex.locatedIn, ex.France))
g.add((ex.Cade, ex.characteristic, ex.Kind))
g.add((ex.Mary, ex.characteristic, ex.Kind))
g.add((ex.Mary, RDF.type, FOAF.Person))
g.add((ex.Cade, RDF.type, FOAF.Person))