Provided by: librdf-trine-perl_1.007-2_all bug

NAME

       RDF::Trine::Model - Model class

VERSION

       This document describes RDF::Trine::Model version 1.007

METHODS

       "new ( $store )"
           Returns a new model over the supplied rdf store or a new temporary model.  If you
           provide an unblessed value, it will be used to create a new rdf store.

       "temporary_model"
           Returns a new temporary (non-persistent) model.

       "dataset_model ( default => \@dgraphs, named => \@ngraphs )"
           Returns a new model object with the default graph mapped to the union of the graphs
           named in @dgraphs, and with available named graphs named in @ngraphs.

       "begin_bulk_ops"
           Provides a hint to the backend that many update operations are about to occur.  The
           backend may use this hint to, for example, aggregate many operations into a single
           operation, or delay index maintenence. After the update operations have been executed,
           "end_bulk_ops" should be called to ensure the updates are committed to the backend.

       "end_bulk_ops"
           Provides a hint to the backend that a set of bulk operations have been completed and
           may be committed to the backend.

       "logger ( [ $logger ] )"
           Returns the logging object responsible for recording data inserts and deletes.

           If $logger is passed as an argument, sets the logger to this object.

       "add_statement ( $statement [, $context] )"
           Adds the specified $statement to the rdf store.

       "add_hashref ( $hashref [, $context] )"
           Add triples represented in an RDF/JSON-like manner to the model.

           See "as_hashref" for full documentation of the hashref format.

       "add_iterator ( $iter )"
           Add triples from the statement iteratorto the model.

       "add_list ( @elements )"
           Adds an rdf:List to the model with the given elements. Returns the node object that is
           the head of the list.

       "get_list ( $head )"
           Returns a list of nodes that are elements of the rdf:List represented by the supplied
           head node.

       "remove_list ( $head [, orphan_check => 1] )"
           Removes the nodes of type rdf:List that make up the list. Optionally checks each node
           before removal to make sure that it is not used in any other statements. Returns false
           if the list was removed completely; returns the first remaining node if the removal
           was abandoned because of an orphan check.

       "get_sequence ( $seq )"
           Returns a list of nodes that are elements of the rdf:Seq sequence.

       "remove_statement ( $statement [, $context])"
           Removes the specified $statement from the rdf store.

       "remove_statements ( $subject, $predicate, $object [, $context] )"
           Removes all statements matching the supplied $statement pattern from the rdf store.

       "size"
           Returns the number of statements in the model.

       "etag"
           If the model is based on a store that has the capability and knowledge to support
           caching, this method returns a persistent token that will remain consistent as long as
           the store's data doesn't change. This token is acceptable for use as an HTTP ETag.

       "supports ( [ $feature ] )"
           If $feature is specified, returns true if the feature is supported by the underlying
           store, false otherwise. If $feature is not specified, returns a list of supported
           features.

       "count_statements ( $subject, $predicate, $object )"
           Returns a count of all the statements matching the specified subject, predicate and
           objects. Any of the arguments may be undef to match any value.

       "get_statements ($subject, $predicate, $object [, $context] )"
           Returns an iterator of all statements matching the specified subject, predicate and
           objects from the rdf store. Any of the arguments may be undef to match any value.

           If three or fewer arguments are given, the statements returned will be matched based
           on triple semantics (the graph union of triples from all the named graphs). If four
           arguments are given (even if $context is undef), statements will be matched based on
           quad semantics (the union of all quads in the underlying store).

       "get_pattern ( $bgp [, $context] [, %args ] )"
           Returns a stream object of all bindings matching the specified graph pattern.

           If $context is given, restricts BGP matching to only quads with the $context value.

           %args may contain an 'orderby' key-value pair to request a specific ordering based on
           variable name. The value for the 'orderby' key should be an ARRAY reference containing
           variable name and direction ('ASC' or 'DESC') tuples.  A valid %args hash, therefore,
           might look like "orderby => [qw(name ASC)]" (corresponding to a SPARQL-like request to
           'ORDER BY ASC(?name)').

       "get_sparql ( $sparql )"
           Returns a stream object of all bindings matching the specified graph pattern.

       "get_graphs"
       "get_contexts"
           Returns an iterator containing the nodes representing the named graphs in the model.

       "as_stream"
           Returns an iterator containing every statement in the model.

       "as_hashref"
           Returns a hashref representing the model in an RDF/JSON-like manner.

           A graph like this (in Turtle):

             @prefix ex: <http://example.com/> .

             ex:subject1
               ex:predicate1
                 "Foo"@en ,
                 "Bar"^^ex:datatype1 .

             _:bnode1
               ex:predicate2
                 ex:object2 ;
               ex:predicate3 ;
                 _:bnode3 .

           Is represented like this as a hashref:

             {
               "http://example.com/subject1" => {
                 "http://example.com/predicate1" => [
                   { 'type'=>'literal', 'value'=>"Foo", 'lang'=>"en" },
                   { 'type'=>'literal', 'value'=>"Bar", 'datatype'=>"http://example.com/datatype1" },
                 ],
               },
               "_:bnode1" => {
                 "http://example.com/predicate2" => [
                   { 'type'=>'uri', 'value'=>"http://example.com/object2" },
                 ],
                 "http://example.com/predicate2" => [
                   { 'type'=>'bnode', 'value'=>"_:bnode3" },
                 ],
               },
             }

           Note that the type of subjects (resource or blank node) is indicated entirely by the
           convention of starting blank nodes with "_:".

           This hashref structure is compatible with RDF/JSON and with the ARC2 library for PHP.

       "as_graphviz"
           Returns a GraphViz object of the RDF graph of this model, ignoring graph
           names/contexts.

           This method will attempt to load the GraphViz module at runtime and will fail if the
           module is unavailable.

   Node-Centric Graph API
       "subjects ( $predicate, $object )"
           Returns a list of the nodes that appear as the subject of statements with the
           specified $predicate and $object. Either of the two arguments may be undef to signify
           a wildcard.

       "predicates ( $subject, $object )"
           Returns a list of the nodes that appear as the predicate of statements with the
           specified $subject and $object. Either of the two arguments may be undef to signify a
           wildcard.

       "objects ( $subject, $predicate [, $graph ] [, %options ] )"
           Returns a list of the nodes that appear as the object of statements with the specified
           $subject and $predicate. Either of the two arguments may be undef to signify a
           wildcard. You can further filter objects using the %options argument. Keys in %options
           indicate the restriction type and may be 'type', 'language', or 'datatype'. The value
           of the 'type' key may be one of 'node', 'nil', 'blank', 'resource', 'literal', or
           'variable'. The use of either 'language' or 'datatype' restrict objects to literal
           nodes with a specific language or datatype value, respectively.

       "objects_for_predicate_list ( $subject, @predicates )"
           Given the RDF::Trine::Node objects $subject and @predicates, finds all matching
           triples in the model with the specified subject and any of the given predicates, and
           returns a list of object values (in the partial order given by the ordering of
           @predicates).

       "bounded_description ( $node )"
           Returns an RDF::Trine::Iterator::Graph object over the bounded description triples for
           $node (all triples resulting from a graph traversal starting with "node" and stopping
           at non-blank nodes).

       "as_string"

BUGS

       Please report any bugs or feature requests to through the GitHub web interface at
       <https://github.com/kasei/perlrdf/issues>.

AUTHOR

       Gregory Todd Williams  "<gwilliams@cpan.org>"

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (c) 2006-2012 Gregory Todd Williams. This program is free software; you can
       redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.