You've got a mistake still in your query
> and $object <mulgara:is> 'info:fedora/demo:10'
You should be specifying your Fedora object identifier as a URI, not a
literal, ie
and $object <mulgara:is> <info:fedora/demo:10>
There's no such thing as "the '$object' concept" - $object is simply a
variable; you can substitue $object with $x (or $pid) and get the same
results.
NB for debugging, it's sometimes useful to show all relationships for a
particular object, so that you can see what triples actually exist whilst
debugging a query, for this you can use something like
select $s $p $o
from <#ri>
where
$s $p $o
and
$s <mulgara:is> <info:fedora/demo:10>
Hope that helps
Steve
-----Original Message-----
From: Janna Wemekamp [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 09 April 2009 04:31
To: Gramsbergen, Egbert
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Fedora-commons-users] Questions re iTQL queries involving PIDs
Thanks for the responses.
However, the query
select $object $label $identifier $state
from <#ri>
where $object <fedora-model:label> $label
and $object <dc:identifier> $identifier
and $object <fedora-model:state> $state
and $object <mulgara:is> 'info:fedora/demo:10'
doesn't return any results either. (Yes, there is an object with pid
demo:10.)
I'm beginning to wonder whether '$object' and 'pid' are considered quite
different beasties by FedoraCommons even though they 'look' the same in a
query
result...
(And, I have read the documentation on the mulgara web-site several times.
It
doesn't define the '$object' concept.)
Cheers.
Janna Wemekamp
Gramsbergen, Egbert wrote:
Back to the original question: try with
$object <mulgara:is> <info:fedora/demo:10>
That should work.
Success,
Egbert Gramsbergen
-----Original Message-----
From: arne anka [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wed 4/8/2009 12:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Fedora-commons-users] Questions re iTQL queries involving PIDs
fighting with itql since yesterday again ...
> (1) The query:
>
> select $object from <#ri> where $object <mulgara:is> 'demo'
>
> returns a single element:
>
> <result>
> <object>demo</object>
> </result>
>
> even though there is no object in the repository with this PID.
of course it does -- you defined that $object _is_ 'demo'.
so, that's what you get.
> I'd like to be able to issue queries like:
>
> select $object $label $identifier $state
> from <#ri>
> where $object <fedora-model:label> $label
> and $object <dc:identifier> $identifier
> and $object <fedora-model:state> $state
> and $object <mulgara:is> 'demo:10'
>
> This query returns no results even though the PID 'demo:10' exists.
> What am I doing wrong?
you never really got $object -- what you do is saying that $object has the
model $label.
but since $label is never assigned a value ...
> (2) I'd also like to perform wild-card searches on PIDs; for example
>
> select $object, $label, $identifier
> from <#ri>
> where $object <fedora-model:label> $label
> and $object <dc:identifier> $identifier
> and $object <has_pid> 'demo*' in <#ri-fullText>
>
> How does one specify the <has_pid> predicate/property in this query?
you might be able to taht with 'having'
> The following works quite happily but I'd not like to assume that the DC
> identifier always matched the PID.
>
> select $object $label $identifier
> from <#ri>
> where $object <fedora-model:label> $label
> and $object <fedora-model:ownerId> $ownerId
> and $object <dc:identifier> $identifier
> and $object <dc:identifier> 'demo*' in <#ri-fullText>
>
well, basically, $object should be your id -- what you are doing wrong is
getting $object at all.
imo it has to go like that:
select $object $label $identifier from <#ri> where $object
<fedora-model:hasModel> <info:fedora/my:model> and ...
or for your label (untested) something like:
select $object $label $identifier from <#ri> where $object
<fedora-model:label> 'a label name' and ...
see http://docs.mulgara.org/itqlcommands/select.html
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
This SF.net email is sponsored by:
High Quality Requirements in a Collaborative Environment.
Download a free trial of Rational Requirements Composer Now!
http://p.sf.net/sfu/www-ibm-com
_______________________________________________
Fedora-commons-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fedora-commons-users
_____
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
This SF.net email is sponsored by:
High Quality Requirements in a Collaborative Environment.
Download a free trial of Rational Requirements Composer Now!
http://p.sf.net/sfu/www-ibm-com
_____
_______________________________________________
Fedora-commons-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fedora-commons-users
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This SF.net email is sponsored by:
High Quality Requirements in a Collaborative Environment.
Download a free trial of Rational Requirements Composer Now!
http://p.sf.net/sfu/www-ibm-com
_______________________________________________
Fedora-commons-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/fedora-commons-users