242 research outputs found

    Web and Semantic Web Query Languages

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    A number of techniques have been developed to facilitate powerful data retrieval on the Web and Semantic Web. Three categories of Web query languages can be distinguished, according to the format of the data they can retrieve: XML, RDF and Topic Maps. This article introduces the spectrum of languages falling into these categories and summarises their salient aspects. The languages are introduced using common sample data and query types. Key aspects of the query languages considered are stressed in a conclusion

    Reasoning & Querying ā€“ State of the Art

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    Various query languages for Web and Semantic Web data, both for practical use and as an area of research in the scientific community, have emerged in recent years. At the same time, the broad adoption of the internet where keyword search is used in many applications, e.g. search engines, has familiarized casual users with using keyword queries to retrieve information on the internet. Unlike this easy-to-use querying, traditional query languages require knowledge of the language itself as well as of the data to be queried. Keyword-based query languages for XML and RDF bridge the gap between the two, aiming at enabling simple querying of semi-structured data, which is relevant e.g. in the context of the emerging Semantic Web. This article presents an overview of the field of keyword querying for XML and RDF

    Survey over Existing Query and Transformation Languages

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    A widely acknowledged obstacle for realizing the vision of the Semantic Web is the inability of many current Semantic Web approaches to cope with data available in such diverging representation formalisms as XML, RDF, or Topic Maps. A common query language is the first step to allow transparent access to data in any of these formats. To further the understanding of the requirements and approaches proposed for query languages in the conventional as well as the Semantic Web, this report surveys a large number of query languages for accessing XML, RDF, or Topic Maps. This is the first systematic survey to consider query languages from all these areas. From the detailed survey of these query languages, a common classification scheme is derived that is useful for understanding and differentiating languages within and among all three areas

    TypEx : a type based approach to XML stream querying

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    We consider the topic of query evaluation over semistructured information streams, and XML data streams in particular. Streaming evaluation methods are necessarily eventdriven, which is in tension with high-level query models; in general, the more expressive the query language, the harder it is to translate queries into an event-based implementation with finite resource bounds

    Bisimulations on data graphs

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    Bisimulation provides structural conditions to characterize indistinguishability from an external observer between nodes on labeled graphs. It is a fundamental notion used in many areas, such as verification, graph-structured databases, and constraint satisfaction. However, several current applications use graphs where nodes also contain data (the so called ā€œdata graphsā€), and where observers can test for equality or inequality of data values (e.g., asking the attribute ā€˜nameā€™ of a node to be different from that of all its neighbors). The present work constitutes a first investigation of ā€œdata awareā€ bisimulations on data graphs. We study the problem of computing such bisimulations, based on the observational indistinguishability for XPath ā€”a language that extends modal logics like PDL with tests for data equalityā€” with and without transitive closure operators. We show that in general the problem is PSPACE-complete, but identify several restrictions that yield better complexity bounds (CO- NP, PTIME) by controlling suitable parameters of the problem, namely the amount of non-locality allowed, and the class of models considered (graphs, DAGs, trees). In particular, this analysis yields a hierarchy of tractable fragments.Fil: Abriola, Sergio Alejandro. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĆ­ficas y TĆ©cnicas. Oficina de CoordinaciĆ³n Administrativa Ciudad Universitaria. Instituto de InvestigaciĆ³n En Ciencias de la ComputaciĆ³n. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de InvestigaciĆ³n En Ciencias de la Computacion; ArgentinaFil: BarcelĆ³, Pablo. Universidad de Chile; ChileFil: Figueira, Diego. Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; FranciaFil: Figueira, Santiago. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones CientĆ­ficas y TĆ©cnicas. Oficina de CoordinaciĆ³n Administrativa Ciudad Universitaria. Instituto de InvestigaciĆ³n En Ciencias de la ComputaciĆ³n. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de InvestigaciĆ³n En Ciencias de la Computacion; Argentin

    Four Lessons in Versatility or How Query Languages Adapt to the Web

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    Exposing not only human-centered information, but machine-processable data on the Web is one of the commonalities of recent Web trends. It has enabled a new kind of applications and businesses where the data is used in ways not foreseen by the data providers. Yet this exposition has fractured the Web into islands of data, each in different Web formats: Some providers choose XML, others RDF, again others JSON or OWL, for their data, even in similar domains. This fracturing stifles innovation as application builders have to cope not only with one Web stack (e.g., XML technology) but with several ones, each of considerable complexity. With Xcerpt we have developed a rule- and pattern based query language that aims to give shield application builders from much of this complexity: In a single query language XML and RDF data can be accessed, processed, combined, and re-published. Though the need for combined access to XML and RDF data has been recognized in previous work (including the W3Cā€™s GRDDL), our approach differs in four main aspects: (1) We provide a single language (rather than two separate or embedded languages), thus minimizing the conceptual overhead of dealing with disparate data formats. (2) Both the declarative (logic-based) and the operational semantics are unified in that they apply for querying XML and RDF in the same way. (3) We show that the resulting query language can be implemented reusing traditional database technology, if desirable. Nevertheless, we also give a unified evaluation approach based on interval labelings of graphs that is at least as fast as existing approaches for tree-shaped XML data, yet provides linear time and space querying also for many RDF graphs. We believe that Web query languages are the right tool for declarative data access in Web applications and that Xcerpt is a significant step towards a more convenient, yet highly efficient data access in a ā€œWeb of Dataā€

    Web Queries: From a Web of Data to a Semantic Web?

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    Containment of Pattern-Based Queries over Data Trees

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    International audienceWe study static analysis, in particular the containment problem, for analogs of conjunctive queries over XML documents. The problem has been studied for queries based on arbitrary patterns, not necessarily following the tree structure of documents. However, many applications force the syntactic shape of queries to be tree-like, as they are based on proper tree patterns. This renders previous results, crucially based on having non-tree-like features, inapplicable. Thus, we investigate static analysis of queries based on proper tree patterns. We go beyond simple navigational conjunctive queries in two ways: we look at unions and Boolean combinations of such queries as well and, crucially, all our queries handle data stored in documents, i.e., we deal with containment over data trees. We start by giving a general \Pi^p_2 upper bound on the containment of conjunctive queries and Boolean combinations for patterns that involve all types of navigation through documents. We then show matching hardness for conjunctive queries with all navigation, or their Boolean combinations with the simplest form of navigation. After that we look at cases when containment can be witnessed by homomorphisms of analogs of tableaux. These include conjunctive queries and their unions over child and next-sibling axes; however, we show that not all cases of containment can be witnessed by homomorphisms. We look at extending tree patterns used in queries in three possible ways: with wildcard, with schema information, and with data value comparisons. The first one is relatively harmless, the second one tends to increase complexity by an exponential, and the last one quickly leads to undecidability

    06472 Abstracts Collection - XQuery Implementation Paradigms

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    From 19.11.2006 to 22.11.2006, the Dagstuhl Seminar 06472 ``XQuery Implementation Paradigms'' was held in the International Conference and Research Center (IBFI), Schloss Dagstuhl. During the seminar, several participants presented their current research, and ongoing work and open problems were discussed. Abstracts of the presentations given during the seminar as well as abstracts of seminar results and ideas are put together in this paper. The first section describes the seminar topics and goals in general. Links to extended abstracts or full papers are provided, if available

    Reasoning about XML with temporal logics and automata

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    We show that problems arising in static analysis of XML specifications and transformations can be dealt with using techniques similar to those developed for static analysis of programs. Many properties of interest in the XML context are related to navigation, and can be formulated in temporal logics for trees. We choose a logic that admits a simple single-exponential translation into unranked tree automata, in the spirit of the classical LTL-to-BĆ¼chi automata translation. Automata arising from this translation have a number of additional properties; in particular, they are convenient for reasoning about unary node-selecting queries, which are important in the XML context. We give two applications of such reasoning: one deals with a classical XML problem of reasoning about navigation in the presence of schemas, and the other relates to verifying security properties of XML views
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