Hi,
I'm sure this has been discussed many times and/or ages ago, but I am
struck by the absence of a DOM-like W3C framework for RDF. By this, I
mean "an application programming interface (API) for [RDF graphs]",
which will be "a standard programming interface that can be used in a
wide variety of environments and applications. The [RDF] DOM is designed
to be used with any programming language". (Quotes taken from [1])
A quick search turns up a number of PHP-based libraries, and the odd one
for javascript, Delphi, Python and Ruby, but as far as I can see there
is little, or no, commonality of approach or functionality amongst these
offerings. This means that a programmer (a) has to decide which of
these widely varying approaches to adopt, (b) only gets whatever
documentation each chooses to provide and (c) is faced with a complete
rewrite, should they decide to switch RDF platform.
Might this situation be a significant factor in the slow take-up of RDF
by mainstream developers?
Richard
[1] http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-DOM-Level-1/introduction.html
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*Richard Light*