The Many Shapes of SHACL: Difference between revisions
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Session-Notes: Please be advised this is not an introduction to the Semantic Web, RDF or SHACL some prior knowledge is advised to fully benefit from the session | Session-Notes: <i>Please be advised this is not an introduction to the Semantic Web, RDF or SHACL some prior knowledge is advised to fully benefit from the session</i> | ||
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Revision as of 09:28, 28 May 2020
Speaker: Holger Knublauch
Date: June 18, 2020 - 1pm Berlin, 12pm London and 7am New York time
Location: webcast zoom
Chapter: Global
The Shapes Constraint Language SHACL is now a well-established W3C graph technology standard. While SHACL was originally designed to focus on constraint validation, the community is discovering a variety of other use cases that exploit SHACL's ability to describe the shape of valid RDF data. Instead of just verifying that existing data conforms to a set of constraints, SHACL can pro-actively help with the construction of valid new data, and to traverse and better make sense of graph structures. In this presentation we will look at recently implemented SHACL-based capabilities using the TopBraid platform as an example. Among others we show shape-driven user interfaces, using SHACL to describe GraphQL-based web service APIs and using SHACL schemas to drive various analytical algorithms.
Bio: Holger Knublauch is lead developer at TopQuadrant and original developer of the TopBraid product family. He has extensive hands-on experience with programming semantic technology tools, editors and algorithms. Holger also created various RDF-based languages including SPIN which later became one of the foundations of SHACL. He served as lead editor of the W3C SHACL standard. In a previous role as a Post-Doc at Stanford University, Holger helped develop one of the first editors for the OWL Web Ontology Language.
External Links
SHACL https://www.w3.org/TR/shacl/
Session-Type: Technology - Coding - W3C Recommendation Session-Level: Intermediate Session-Language: English Session-Notes: Please be advised this is not an introduction to the Semantic Web, RDF or SHACL some prior knowledge is advised to fully benefit from the session