Re: Comments about property paths

Dear Andy,

First, I am sorry for the long delay in answering your email.

Thank you very much for your reply. I read the Editor's Draft document that
you mentioned, and I still have some concerns about the definition of the
semantics of property paths; despite the fact that some of the
counterintuitive results described in my previous mail were solved with the
new definition of this semantics, there are still queries containing
equivalent regular expressions that return different answers, as shown
below. This time, the examples were not tested in ARQ, because the last
version of ARQ is working with the semantics described on the Working Draft
document, so I apologize if there are incorrect results in some of the
examples (to the best of my understanding they are correct).

Consider the graph G:

:a :p :b
:b :p :c
:c :p :a

and the following query Q1:

SELECT * WHERE { :a (:p*) ?x }

The result of applying Q1 over G is:

?x= :a, :b, :c

Now consider the query Q2:

SELECT * WHERE { :a (:p?)/(:p*) ?x }

The result of applying Q2 over G is:

?x= :a, :b, :c, :b, :c, :a

Clearly the path properties used in the above queries are equivalent
(regular expressions). Notice that the operator * is not nested in the
regular expressions in Q1 and Q2.

Now consider the following query Q3, containing a regular expression that is
equivalent to the expressions in the previous examples:

SELECT * WHERE { :a (:p*)/(:p*) ?x }

Now, the result of Q3 over G is:

?x = :a, :b, :c, :b, :c, :a, :c, :a, :b.

I don't know how the user could interpret the above results.

I would really appreciate it if you could tell me your opinion about
these examples.


Thank you very much.
With best regards,
Sebastián Conca

El 25 de marzo de 2011 09:07, Andy Seaborne
<andy.seaborne@epimorphics.com>escribió:

> Sebastián,
>
> The details of the property path expressions is something the WG has been
> working on recently and there are changes in the specification since the
> last published working draft in response to comments from the community and
> from discussions with the working group. You can see the changes in the
> editors' draft at http://www.w3.org/2009/sparql/docs/query-1.1/rq25.xml.
>
> The path evaluation has changed recently to make it in-line with the
> decisions of the SPARQL-WG as the WG works through the exact specification
> of property paths.
>
> For both queries:
>
>
> SELECT * WHERE { :a (:p+) ?x }
> SELECT * WHERE { :a :p/(:p*) ?x }
>
> the results would be:
>
> ------
> | x  |
> ======
> | :b |
> | :c |
> | :a |
> ------
>
> The expression (:p+)+ is not equivalent in terms of cardinality of the
> elements although it should return the same elements. SELECT DISTINCT may be
> useful.
>
> We would be grateful if you would acknowledge that your comment has been
> answered by sending a reply to this mailing list.
>
> Andy, on behalf of the SPARQL-WG
>
>
> On 18/03/11 20:04, Sebastián Conca wrote:
>
>> Dear All,
>>
>> I have been trying some examples of SPARQL 1.1 property paths, and I
>> have gotten some results that seem to be counterintuitive. For
>> instance, consider a graph G:
>>
>> :a :p :b
>> :b :p :c
>> :c :p :a
>>
>> and the following query Q1:
>>
>> SELECT * WHERE { :a (:p+) ?x }
>>
>> According to the semantics proposed in the Working Draft document, the
>> result of the query Q1 over G is:
>>
>> ?x = :b, :c, :a
>>
>> Now, consider a query Q2:
>>
>> SELECT * WHERE { :a :p/(:p*) ?x }
>>
>> According to the semantics proposed in the Working Draft document, the
>> result of the query Q2 over G is:
>>
>> ?x = :b, :c, :a, :b
>>
>> I tested both queries in ARQ, getting the same results shown above.
>> The paths used in the queries are equivalent regular expressions (the
>> regular languages represented by (:p+) and :p/(:p*) are the same), so
>> the results of these queries over G should be the same. Am I missing
>> something?
>>
>> I also executed in ARQ a third query Q3 containing a regular
>> expression that is equivalent to (:p+) and :p/(:p*):
>>
>> SELECT * WHERE { :a (:p+)+ ?x }
>>
>> But this time I got the result:
>>
>> ?x = :b, :c, :a, :b, :c, :a, :b, :c, :a, :b, :c, :a, :b, :c, :a
>>
>> What should be the interpretation of this result? I would really
>> appreciate it if you could let me know whether I am missing something.
>> Thank you very much.
>>
>> With best regards,
>>
>> Sebastián Conca
>>
>

Received on Thursday, 7 April 2011 18:42:38 UTC