NAME¶
TM::Bulk - Topic Maps, Bulk Retrieval Trait
SYNOPSIS¶
my $tm = ..... # get a map from anywhere
use TM::Bulk;
use Class::Trait;
Class::Trait->apply ($tm, 'TM::Bulk'); # give the map the trait
# find out environment of topic
my $vortex = $tm->vortex ('some-lid',
{
'types' => [ 'types' ],
'instances' => [ 'instances*', 0, 20 ],
'topic' => [ 'topic' ],
'roles' => [ 'roles', 0, 10 ],
'members' => [ 'players' ],
},
);
# find names of topics (optionally using a scope preference list)
my $names = $tm->names ([ 'ccc', 'bbb', 'aaa' ], [ 's1', 's3', '*' ]);
DESCRIPTION¶
Especially when you build user interfaces, you might need access to a lot of
topic-related information. Instead of collecting this 'by foot' the following
methods help you achieve this more effectively.
- names
- $name_hash_ref =
$tm->names ( $lid_list_ref, [
$scope_list_ref ] )
This method takes a list (reference) of topic ids and an optional list of
scoping topic ids. For the former it will try to find the names
(topic names for TMDM acolytes).
If the list of scopes is empty then the preference is on the unconstrained
scope. If no name for a topic is in that scope, some other will be used.
If the list of scopes is non-empty, it directs to look first for a name in
the first scoping topic, then second, and so on. If you want to have one
name in any case, append "*" to the scoping list.
If no name exist for a particular lid, then an "undef" is
returned in the result hash. References to non-existing topics are
ignored.
The overall result is a hash (reference). The keys are of the form
"topic-id @ scope-id" (without the blanks) and the name strings
are the values.
- vortex
- $info =
$tm->vortex (,
$vortex_lid,
$what_hashref,
$scope_list_ref )
This method returns a lot of information about a particular toplet
(vortex). The function expects the following parameters:
- lid:
- the lid of the toplet in question
- what:
- a hash reference describing the extent of the information
(see below)
- scopes:
- a list (reference) to scopes (currently NOT
honored)
To control
what exactly should be returned, the "what" hash
reference can contain following components. All of them being tagged with
<n,m> accept an additional pair of integer specify the range which
should be returned. To ask for the first twenty, use "0,19", for the
next "20,39". The order in which the identifiers is returned is
undefined but stable over subsequent read-only calls.
- topic:
- fetches the toplet (which is only the subject locator,
subject indicators information).
- names (<n,m>):
- fetches all names (as array reference triple [ type,
scope, string value ])
- occurrences (<n,m>):
- fetches all occurrences (as array reference triple [
type, scope, value ])
- instances (<n,m>):
- fetches all toplets which are direct instances of the
vortex (that is regarded as class here);
- instances* (<n,m>):
- same as "instances", but including all instances
of subclasses of the vortex
- types (<n,m>):
- fetches all (direct) types of the vortex (that is regarded
as instance here)
- types* (<n,m>):
- fetches all (direct and indirect) types of the vortex (that
is regarded as instance here)
- subclasses (<n,m>):
- fetches all direct subclasses
- subclasses* (<n,m>):
- same as "subclasses", but creates reflexive,
transitive closure
- superclasses (<n,m>):
- fetches all direct superclasses
- superclasses* (<n,m>):
- same as "superclasses", but creates reflexive,
transitive closure
- roles (<n,m>):
- fetches all assertion ids where the vortex plays a
role
- peers (<n,m>):
- fetches all topics which are also a direct instance of any
of the (direct) types of this topic
- peers* (<n,m>):
- fetches all topics which are also a (direct or indirect)
instances of any of the (direct) types of this topic
- peers** (<n,m>):
- fetches all topics which are also a (direct or indirect)
instances of any of the (direct or indirect) types of this topic
The function will determine all of the requested information and will prepare a
hash reference storing each information into a hash component. Under which
name this information is stored, the caller can determine with the hash above
as the example shows:
Example:
$vortex = $tm->vortex ('some-lid',
{
'types' => [ 'types' ],
'instances' => [ 'instances*', 0, 20 ],
'topic' => [ 'topic' ],
'roles' => [ 'roles', 0, 10 ],
},
);
The method dies if "lid" does not identify a proper toplet.
SEE ALSO¶
TM::Overview
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE¶
Copyright 200[3-57] by Robert Barta, <drrho@cpan.org>
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.