Learn R Programming

datapack (version 1.4.1)

insertRelationship: Record relationships of objects in a DataPackage

Description

Record a relationship of the form "subject -> predicate -> object", as defined by the Resource Description Framework (RDF), i.e. an RDF triple.

Usage

insertRelationship(x, ...)

# S4 method for DataPackage insertRelationship( x, subjectID, objectIDs, predicate = NA_character_, subjectType = NA_character_, objectTypes = NA_character_, dataTypeURIs = NA_character_ )

Arguments

x

A DataPackage object

...

(Additional parameters)

subjectID

The identifier of the subject of the relationship

objectIDs

A list of identifiers of the object of the relationships (a relationship is recorded for each objectID)

predicate

The IRI of the predicate of the relationship

subjectType

the type to assign the subject, values can be 'uri', 'blank'

objectTypes

the types to assign the objects (cal be single value or list), each value can be 'uri', 'blank', or 'literal'

dataTypeURIs

An RDF data type that specifies the type of the object

Value

the updated DataPackage object

Details

For use with DataONE, a best practice is to specify the subject and predicate as DataONE persistent identifiers (https://mule1.dataone.org/ArchitectureDocs-current/design/PIDs.html). If the objects are not known to DataONE, then local identifiers can be used, and these local identifiers may be promoted to DataONE PIDs when the package is uploaded to a DataONE member node. The predicate is typically an RDF property (as a IRI) from a schema supported by DataONE, i.e. "http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#wasGeneratedBy" If multiple values are specified for argument objectIDS, a relationship is created for each value in the list "objectIDs". IF a value is not specified for subjectType or objectType, then NA is assigned. Note that if these relationships are fetched via the getRelationships() function, and passed to the createFromTriples() function to initialize a ResourceMap object, the underlying redland package will assign appropriate values for subjects and objects. Note: This method updates the passed-in DataPackage object.

See Also

DataPackage-class

Examples

Run this code
# NOT RUN {
dp <- new("DataPackage")
# Create a relationship
dp <- insertRelationship(dp, "/Users/smith/scripts/genFields.R",
    "https://knb.ecoinformatics.org/knb/d1/mn/v1/object/doi:1234/_030MXTI009R00_20030812.40.1",
    "http://www.w3.org/ns/prov#used")
# Create a relationshp with the subject as a blank node with an automatically assigned blank 
# node id
dp <- insertRelationship(dp, subjectID=NA_character_, objectIDs="thing6", 
    predicate="http://www.myns.org/wasThing")
# Create a relationshp with the subject as a blank node with a user assigned blank node id
dp <- insertRelationship(dp, subjectID="urn:uuid:bc9e160e-ca21-47d5-871b-4a4820fe4451", 
      objectIDs="thing7", predicate="http://www.myns.org/hadThing")
# Create multiple relationships with the same subject, predicate, but different objects
dp <- insertRelationship(dp, subjectID="urn:uuid:95055dc1-b2a0-4a00-bdc2-05c16d048ca2", 
      objectIDs=c("thing4", "thing5"), predicate="http://www.myns.org/hadThing")
# Create multiple relationships with subject and object types specified
dp <- insertRelationship(dp, subjectID="orcid.org/0000-0002-2192-403X", 
    objectIDs="http://www.example.com/home", predicate="http://www.example.com/hadHome",
                   subjectType="uri", objectType="literal")                
# }

Run the code above in your browser using DataLab