What are the conceptual differences between rdf:resource
, rdf:about
, and rdf:ID
. I did some investigation but the difference between them are not clear for me yet. For example, whether rdf:ID
is used when declaring a resource for the first time, rdf:resource
is used for referencing an already existing resource, etc.
I would be glad if you provide some little examples.
To be clear this is only about a particular way of writing rdf: namely RDF/XML. Other syntaxes don't feature these differences.
With that disclaimer out of the way:
What we're trying to do is write statements of the form:
subject predicate object
and in particular:
subjectURI predicate objectURI
So how do we introduce subject and object URIs in RDF/XML?
rdf:about
sets the subject URI of a statement, which may be absolute (http://example.com/
) or resolved relative to the BASE of the document (e.g. /foo/bar
, #frag
). (Like href
in html)rdf:resource
sets the object URI of a statement, once again either absolute or relative.rdf:ID
sets the subject URI, but it can only be within this document. An ID can also only be used once. Very like <a name="baz">
or id="baz"
in html.rdf:ID
is discouraged since
rdf:about
or rdf:resource
with a fragment #baz
and That is, it's redundant and a potential source of errors.
In retrospect there typically only needs to be one attribute to specify a URI, since whether something is a subject or object is apparent from the RDF/XML syntax:
<ex:Foo ...> - subject <ex:prop ... /> - property then object </ex:Foo> <ex:Foo ...> - subject <ex:prop> - property <ex:Bar ... /> - subject (and implictly an object chaining from previous) ...
(rule of thumb: odd lines rdf:about
, even lines, rdf:resource
)
and using both rdf:about
and rdf:resource
on an element is almost always an error (you're either in a subject position or object position).
Avoid rdf:ID
. Use rdf:about
and rdf:resource
much like an href, the former for subject, the latter for objects.
Forgot to mention that rdf:ID
can be used on a property element, but it does something you may find unexpected: it reifies the triple. Avoid rdf:ID
.
I would like to clarify a few of the excellent points in the provided answer, but only with respect to rdf:ID and rdf:about.
The tags are used to build a URI. If the full URI is not provided (such as rdf:ID="x"), then the generated URI is relative to the in-scope base URI usually derived from the document's location, but it can be specified with the xml:base attribute.
The point (mentioned above) is that rdf:about may be a fully qualified URI, so it is easy to just set it.
rdf:ID cannot be a fully qualified URI, but, you can still control that if you manually set the xml:base attribute.
The general rule of thumb for me, therefore, is to use rdf:about for a "globally known" identifier (when you want the URI to always be the same) and to use rdf:ID when describing a local resource whose URI is not cared about outside of the current document.
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