s | p_blank | o_blank |
---|---|---|
/id/statistical-geography/S01010914 | http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type | geosparql: Geometry |
/id/statistical-geography/S01010914 | geosparql: asWKT | POLYGON ((-4.674093364756491 55.92781431858065, -4.67328671725935 55.927500920348784, -4.6700720073304405 55.92627937656848, -4.670778239930775 55.92556492800534, -4.673989968900385 55.926546742461824, -4.674310384299449 55.925860769114465, -4.675962552216628 55.926139460353774, -4.6774145156009945 55.925916776760026, -4.677553976504322 55.92530291608588, -4.680918819555598 55.92542415452983, -4.6804792009265626 55.92489609303032, -4.6805690185332285 55.92419026980233, -4.681675747032577 55.923860422379455, -4.682475797747604 55.92471235373718, -4.68365664655015 55.92535176138577, -4.68299937308106 55.92626493410325, -4.683322016887638 55.92699495475167, -4.6851506364172115 55.92776805156263, -4.687460742316058 55.927814536785974, -4.687351301607966 55.92820018500945, -4.6852415303432196 55.92789396568253, -4.684220767400508 55.92822003707898, -4.683785597504654 55.92791065963742, -4.682401265545523 55.929423925843665, -4.680316654215711 55.92914574669618, -4.676313464213952 55.9284418590981, -4.674093364756491 55.92781431858065)) |
The most flexible way to access the data is by using SPARQL, a query language, analagous to SQL for relational databases, for retrieving and manipulating data from graph databases like ours. We support SPARQL 1.1 query syntax. Many online tutorials are available.
To submit a SPARQL query from your code, you issue an HTTP GET or POST to our endpoint:http://statistics.gov.scot/sparql
, with the query itself as a url-encoded parameter called query
.
For example, to run the following simple SPARQL query and get the results as JSON:
SELECT * WHERE {?s ?p ?o} LIMIT 10
Issue a POST to the endpoint, with the query in the body, and an Accept header of sparql-results+json
:
POST http://statistics.gov.scot/sparql HTTP/1.1
Host: statistics.gov.scot
Accept: application/sparql-results+json
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
query=SELECT+%2A+WHERE+%7B%3Fs+%3Fp+%3Fo%7D+LIMIT+10
Issue a GET to the following URL (note the .json
extension - see the formats section for more detail on this):
GET http://statistics.gov.scot/sparql.json?query=SELECT+%2A+WHERE+%7B%3Fs+%3Fp+%3Fo%7D+LIMIT+10
Scroll down to the end of this page for examples of both of these methods in a few different languages.
As with other aspects of our API, to get the data in different formats, you can use either (a) a format extension or (b) an HTTP Accept header. Available result formats depend on the type of SPARQL query. There are four main forms:
SELECT
queries return tabular results, and the formats available reflect this:
Format | Extensions | Accept Headers |
---|---|---|
XML | .xml |
application/xml, application/sparql-results+xml |
JSON | .json |
application/json, application/sparql-results+json |
Text | .txt, .text | text/plain |
CSV | .csv | text/csv |
CONSTRUCT
and DESCRIBE
queries return graph data, so the results are available in the same formats as our resource APIs:
Format | Extensions | Accept Headers |
---|---|---|
RDF/XML | .rdf | application/rdf+xml |
N-triples | .nt, .txt, .text | application/n-triples, text/plain |
Turtle | .ttl | text/turtle |
JSON-LD | .json | application/ld+json, application/json |
ASK
queries return a boolean result:
Format | Extensions | Accept Headers |
---|---|---|
XML | .xml | application/xml, application/sparql-results+xml |
JSON | .json | application/json, application/sparql-results+json |
Text | .txt, .text | text/plain |
We accept page
and per_page
parameters for paginating the results of SELECT queries (we automatically modify your query to apply LIMIT
and OFFSET
clauses). For other query types (i.e. DESCRIBE, CONSTRUCT, ASK), pagination like this doesn’t make so much sense, so these parameters are ignored.
For requests made through the website (i.e. HTML format), the page size is defaulted to 20. For requests to our sparql endpoint for data formats (i.e. non-HTML), there will be no defaults for these parameters (i.e. results are unlimited. For performance reasons we generally advise LIMITing your query if possible).
You can parameterise your SPARQL by including %{tokens}
in your queries, and providing values for the tokens in the request parameters.
Note that the following tokens are reserved and cannot be used as parameters for substitution:
controller
action
page
per_page
id
commit
utf8
query
Our servers are configured to allow access from all domains. This means that if you’re writing JavaScript to request data from our server in to a web page hosted on another domain, your browser should check this header and allow it.
If you need to support very old browsers, you can additionally pass a callback
parameter and the results will be wrapped in that function. For example:
http://statistics.gov.scot/sparql.json?callback=myCallbackFunction&query=SELECT+%2A+WHERE+%7B%3Fs+%3Fp+%3Fo%7D+LIMIT+10
This help topic on the jQuery website has more details.
Here’s a couple of examples running a query using the widely available cURL command line program.
Request the results as XML, using a POST:
curl -X POST -H "Accept: application/sparql-results+xml" -d "query=SELECT%20*%20WHERE%20%7B%3Fs%20%3Fp%20%3Fo%7D%20LIMIT%2010" http://statistics.gov.scot/sparql
Request the results as JSON, using a GET:
curl -X GET -H "Accept: application/sparql-results+json" http://statistics.gov.scot/sparql?query=SELECT%20*%20WHERE%20%7B%3Fs%20%3Fp%20%3Fo%7D%20LIMIT%2010
This example HTML page uses jQuery to issue a POST to our SPARQL endpoint, requesting the results as JSON.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang='en'>
<head>
<script src='http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.9.1.min.js'></script>
</head>
<body>
<script type='text/javascript'>
var query = 'SELECT * WHERE {?s ?p ?o} LIMIT 10';
var url = 'http://statistics.gov.scot/sparql.json';
$.ajax({
method: 'POST',
dataType: 'json',
url: url,
data: {query: query},
success: function(data) {
alert('success: ' + data.results.bindings.length + ' results');
console.log(data);
}
});
</script>
</body>
</html>