Thank you,

And what is SPIN then? Is it the combination of Jena and SPARQL? If it is,
then it would be better than Jena, for sure? But it is still Jena which are
using in most of semantic web applications.

On Sun, Apr 16, 2017 at 3:06 PM, Lorenz B. <
buehm...@informatik.uni-leipzig.de> wrote:

> Right. Both are totally different things. And obviously, you can't do
> everything with Java. On the other hand, somebody, e.g. a domain expert
> might be able to declare a rule that infers data without touching any
> Java code.
> > I think you are confused. Rules are for inference, RDF API is for
> > manipulating RDF from Java. They are orthogonal.
> >
> > On Sun, Apr 16, 2017 at 1:01 PM, javed khan <javedbtk...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >> Is there any advantage of Jena rule (speed etc) over RDF API? For
> example,
> >> a functionality in our application we achieve using rule and RDF, which
> way
> >> will be best to follow?
> >>
> >> I am asking this because in my application I have used few rules but I
> >> could easily got the same result using RDF API.
> >>
> >> Thank you
>
> --
> Lorenz Bühmann
> AKSW group, University of Leipzig
> Group: http://aksw.org - semantic web research center
>
>

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