You definitely want to use the N3 parser from https://www.npmjs.com/package/n3
With some tweaking, you can build a small js lib on top of that
parser, that returns a Javascript graph of objects, given a SPARQL
query.

Once you get used to this, it is MUCH MUCH more convenient than Json.
(because you can traverse the graph of objects in any direction you
want, whereas Json forces you to traverse in one predefined tree
structure).



On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 4:09 PM, Mark Feblowitz
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I’ve just been trying out Thomas Fritz’ node-sparql-client, 
> https://github.com/thomasfr/node-sparql-client. I’ve wrapped it for node-red.
>
> I’ve noticed a bug or two, but it does the basic job just fine.
>
> Mark
>
>
>> On Feb 17, 2015, at 2:47 AM, Nauman Ramzan <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>>
>> Hi !
>> I know this platform is for jena. But I am sending because people who are
>> working on jena may be they are also working on nodeJS app.
>> My question is can some one help me to find a good module which is working
>> great with jena fuseki?
>>
>> Thanks in advance
>>
>> Regards
>> Nauman
>

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