This script in this module converts a simple RDF vocabulary, described in YAML, into a formal RDFS in JSON-LD, Turtle, and HTML+RDFa. Optionally, a simple JSON-LD @context
is also generated for the vocabulary. Neither the script nor the YAML format is prepared for complex vocabularies; its primary goal is to simplify the generation of simple, straightforward RDFS vocabularies not requiring, for instance, sophisticated OWL statements.
When running, the script relies on two files:
- The
vocabulary.yml
file, containing the definition for the vocabulary entries. (It is also possible to use a different name for the YAML file, see below.) - The
template.html
file, used to create the HTML file version of the vocabulary. (It is also possible to use a different name for the template file, see below.)
The vocabulary is defined in a YAML file, which contains several block sequences with the following keys: vocab
, prefix
, ontology
, class
, property
, individual
, and datatype
. Only the vocab
and ontology
blocks are required, all others are optional.
Each block sequence consists of blocks with the following keys:id
, property
, value
, label
, upper_value
, domain
, range
, deprecated
, comment
, status
, defined_by
, context
, and see_also
. The interpretation of these key/value pairs may depend on the top level block where they reside, but some have a common interpretation.
-
Common key/value pairs for the
class
,property
,datatype
, andindividual
blocks:label
refers to a short header label to the term. If missing, the capitalized value ofid
is used.comment
refers to a longer description of the term, and can be used for blocks in theclass
,property
andindividual
top-level blocks. It may include HTML Flow content elements. The comment will be encapsulated into an HTML<div>
element and will then be displayed verbatim in the HTML version of the vocabulary, and as a literal of typerdf:HTML
in the JSON-LD and Turtle versions. Note that the Markdown syntax for simple formatting, like the use of backtick for<code.../>
, may also be used.type
refers to RDF types. Note that the tool automatically adds types likerdf:Property
,rdfs:Class
, etc.; this key is to be used for the vocabulary specific types only.defined_by
should be a URL, or a list thereof, referring to the formal definition(s) of the term.see_also
refers to one or more blocks withlabel
andurl
keys, providing a human readable title and a URL, respectively, to an external document that can be referred to by the description of the term. (These are translated into anrdfs:seeAlso
term in the vocabulary.)- The
status
key refers to a string that can bestable
,reserved
, ordeprecated
. The terms are divided, in the HTML output, into these three sections.stable
is the default. - The
deprecated
key refers to a boolean, signaling whether term is deprecated or not. Default isfalse
. This property is a leftover from earlier version and is overwritten, if applicable, by the value ofstatus
. - The
context
key refers to list of URLs or two special keywords. It is used to add information on JSON-LD@context
file(s) that "mention" the term; the list of URLs refer to the relevant@context
file. If the value isvocab
, and a global@context
file is defined in thevocab
block, that "default"@context
is used. Finally, if the value of the property isnone
, there is no context file reference for the term. The default setting isvocab
(i.e., unless it is otherwise specified, the default value is used for the term). - The
example
key refers to on or more blocks withlabel
andjson
keys, providing a (JSON) example with a title. These examples are placed, in the HTML version, to the end of the section referring to a term (the examples are ignored in the Turtle and the JSON-LD versions). Care should be taken to use the"|"
block style indicator in the YAML file for the examples.
For these blocks the
id
key, and either thecomment
or thedefined_by
keys, are required. All the others are optional. -
Top level blocks:
-
vocab
: a block with theid
and thevalue
keys defining the prefix and the URL of the vocabulary, respectively. Theid
provides a prefix that can be used in the vocabulary descriptions, e.g., for cross references. The additional, optionalcontext
key may provide a default context file reference (as a URI), used by all terms unless locally overwritten (see above). -
prefix
: definition of a prefixes, and corresponding URLs, for each external external vocabulary in use, defined by theid
andvalue
keys, respectively.Some id/value pairs are defined by default, and it is not necessary to define them here. These are:
dc
(forhttp://purl.org/dc/terms/
),owl
(forhttp://www.w3.org/2002/07/owl#
),rdf
(forhttp://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#
),rdfs
(forhttp://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#
),xsd
(forhttp://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema#
), andschema
(forhttp://schema.org/
). -
ontology
: definition of "ontology properties", that is, statements made about the vocabulary itself. The (prefixed) property term is defined by theproperty
key, and the value by thevalue
key. If the value can be parsed as a URL, it is considered to be the URL of an external resource; otherwise, the value is considered to be (English) text.It is good practice to provide, at least,
dc:description
as an ontology property with a short description of the vocabulary.The script automatically adds a
dc:date
key with the generation time as a value. -
class
: blocks of a class definitions. For each class heid
key defines the class name (no prefix should be used here). Possible superclasses are defined by theupper_value
key as a single term, or a sequence of terms. -
property
: blocks of a property definitions. For each property theid
key defines the property name (no prefix should be used here); possible superproperties are defined in the by theupper_value
as a single term, or as a sequence of terms. The domain and range classes can also be provided as a single term, or as a sequence of terms, through thedomain
andrange
keys, respectively.Note that both the
domain
and therange
keys can take an array of class references as values. For the former this means the resulting domain is the union of the referred classes, whereas for the latter it is the intersection.The
range
key may also use the (single)IRI
(orURL
) term instead of class references. This keyword denotes a property that has no explicit range, but whose objects are expected to be IRI references. The generated vocabulary annotates these properties as belonging to theowl:ObjectProperty
class, which is the term reserved for properties whose objects are not supposed to be literals.The
dataset
key can also be set to a boolean value. This key only influences the generated JSON-LD@context
: if the value istrue
, the JSON-LD@container
is set to the@graph
value for the property, signalling that the value refers to a dataset (or graph). See the JSON-LD Specification for further details. -
individual
: blocks of definitions of individuals, i.e., a single resources defined in the vocabulary. For each individual theid
key defines the property name (no prefix should be used here); the possible types are defined in the block fortype
as a single term, or a sequence of terms. (Earlier versions of this tool usedupper_value
for the same purpose, but that usage, though still understood for backward compatibility reasons, is deprecated.) -
datatype
: blocks of datatype definitions. For each datatype theid
key defines the datatype name (no prefix should be used here). The possible types are defined in the block forupper_value
or fortype
, as a single term for possible datatype this is derived from.
-
There are some examples in the example directory on github that illustrate all of these terms.
The script is in TypeScript (version 5.0.2 and beyond) running on top of node.js
(version 16 and beyond).
Beyond the YAML file itself, the script relies on an HTML template file, i.e., a skeleton file in HTML that is completed by the vocabulary entries. The
example template file on github provides a good starting point for a template that also makes use of respec. The script relies on the existing id
values and section structures to be modified/extended by the script. Unused subsections (e.g., when there are no deprecated classes) are removed from the final HTML file.
The script can be used as a standard npm module via:
npm install yml2vocab
The npm installation installs the node_modules/.bin/yml2vocab
script. The script can be used as:
yml2vocab [-v vocab_file_name] [-t template_file_name] [-c]
Running this script generates the vocab_file_name.ttl
, vocab_file_name.jsonld
, and vocab_file_name.html
files for the Turtle, JSON-LD, and HTML+RDFa versions, respectively. The script relies on the vocab_file_name.yml
file for the vocabulary specification in YAML and a template_file_name
file for a template file. The defaults are vocabulary
and template.html
, respectively.
If the -c
flag is also set, the additional vocab_file_name_context.jsonld
is also generated, containing a simple @context
structure that can be used as a separate @context
file or embedded in a JSON file. Note that this is a "minimal" JSON-LD file, which does not necessarily use all the sophistication that JSON-LD defines for @context
; these may have to be added manually.
The simplest way of using the module from Javascript is:
const yml2vocab = require('yml2vocab');
async function main() {
await yml2vocab.generateVocabularyFiles("vocabulary","template.html",false);
}
main();
This reads (asynchronously) the YAML and template files and stores the generated vocabulary representations (see the command line interface for details) in the directory alongside the YAML file. By setting the last argument to true
a @context
is also generated.
The somewhat lower level yml2vocab.VocabGeneration
class can also be used:
const yml2vocab = require('yml2vocab');
const vocabGeneration = new yml2vocab.VocabGeneration(yml_content); // YAML content is text form, before parsing
const turtle: string = vocabGeneration.getTurtle(); // returns the turtle content as a string
const jsonld: string = vocabGeneration.getJSONLD(); // returns the JSON-LD content as a string
const html: string = vocabGeneration.getHTML(template_file_content); // returns the HTML+RDFa content as a string
const html: string = vocabGeneration.getContext(); // returns the minimal @context file for the vocabulary
If TypeScript is used instead of Javascript the same works, except that the require
must be replaced by:
import yml2vocab from 'yml2vocab';
There is no need to install any extra typing, it is included in the package. The interfaces are simply using strings, no extra TypeScript type definitions have been defined.
The repository may also be cloned. For a complete installation:
-
If necessary, install
node.js
on your local machine. Installation ofnode.js
should automatically install thenpm
package manager. -
Clone the repository (i.e., https://github.com/w3c/yml2vocab/) to your local machine.
-
In the directory of the repository clone, run
npm install
on the command line. This installs all the necessary packages in thenode_modules
subdirectory. -
Create a directory for the vocabulary definition; this should include
- A
vocabulary.yml
file. You can start with the YAML file in theexample
directory of the repository, and change the cells for your vocabulary. - A
template.html
file. You can start with the HTML file in theexample
directory of the repository, and adapt/change it as you wish.
- A
-
Run the
main.ts
file in the directory vocabulary definition. This generates thevocabulary.ttl
,vocabulary.jsonld
, andvocabulary.html
files for, respectively, the Turtle, JSON-LD, and HTML representations."Running" may be done in two different ways:
- Run, via
node
, the filedist/main.js
of the repository - Run, via
node_modules/.bin/ts-node
, the filemain.ts
of the repository
The script also accepts a single argument to be used instead of
vocabulary
to name the various files (see above). - Run, via
Readme.md
: this file.package.json
: configuration file fornpm
.example
: a folder with examples for vocabulary definition files and the generated RDF vocabulary files.lib
directory: the TypeScript modules for the script.dist
directory: the Javascript distribution files (compiled from the TypeScript sources)main.ts
: the TypeScript entry point to the script as a command line toolindex.ts
: the top level type interface, to be used if the files are used by an external script.
The following files and directories are generated/modified by either the script or npm
; better not to touch these directly:
package-lock.json
: used bynpm
as an internal file for the packages.node_modules
directory: the various Javascript libraries used by the script. This directory should not be uploaded to github, it is strictly for the local activation of the script.
The original idea, structure, and script (in Ruby) was created by Gregg Kellogg for v1 of the Credentials Vocabulary and with a vocabulary definition using CSV. The CSV definitions have been changed to YAML, and the script itself has been re-written in TypeScript (and developed further since).