ontodocs

A Python package for creating ontology documentation


Keywords
ontology, semantic, web, linked, data, rdf, owl, documentation
License
MIT
Install
pip install ontodocs==1.1

Documentation

Ontodocs

Ontodocs is a Python command line application aimed at facilitating the creation of documentation for ontologies encoded in RDF/OWL.

Links

Examples

That's the kind of documentation OntoDocs can generate out-of-the-box. For even more examples, take a look at this page.

Installation

pip install ontodocs -U

Description

Ontodocs allows to generate documentation for an RDF vocabulary, using visualization algorithms that create simple HTML pages, Markdown files, or more complex javascript interactive charts based on D3.js.

> Ontodocs -h
Usage: ontodocs [OPTIONS] [SOURCE]...

  Ontodocs allows to create  documentation for ontologies encoded in
  RDF/OWL.

  E.g.:

  > ontodocs http://www.w3.org/2008/05/skos# --theme random -o
  ~/Desktop/skos

  ==> generates html docs for the SKOS ontology and save it to your desktop

Options:
  -o, --outputpath TEXT  Output path (default: home folder).
  -t, --title TEXT       Title for the visualization (default=graph uri).
  --theme TEXT           CSS Theme for the html-complex visualization
                         (random=use a random theme).
  --showthemes           Show the available CSS theme choices.
  -v, --verbose          Verbose mode.
  -h, --help             Show this message and exit.

The library is not really meant to be used programmatically, but I'm sure there are a few constructs in there which can be reused.

In a nutshell, all visualizations inherit from a VizFactory class that abstracts away the most common operations involved in rendering a dataviz.

This is how you would invoke a visualization from a script:

import ontospy
from ontodocs.viz.viz_html_single import *

g = ontospy.Ontospy("http://cohere.open.ac.uk/ontology/cohere.owl#")

v = HTMLVisualizer(g) # => instantiate the visualization object
v.build() # => render visualization. You can pass an 'output_path' parameter too
v.preview() # => open in browser

Dependencies

Ontodocs relies on the OntoSpy library, which itself relies on Rdflib.

note: the functionalities of Ontodocs used to be part of OntoSpy until v1.8.