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I'm trying to understand how best to handle literals in Marklogic SPARQL data which may be in any case. I'd like to be able to do a case insensitive search but I believe that isn't possible with semantic queries. For a simplistic example I want:

SELECT *
WHERE { ?s ?p "Red"}

and

SELECT *
WHERE { ?s ?p "red"}

to return all values whether the object is "Red", "RED", "red" or "rED".

My data is from another source which has variable capitalisation rules. At the moment the only thing I can think of is to add an extra triple which always contains the text in lower case so I can always search on that value. Alternatively, would it make sense to create some new range query in MarkLogic with a case insensitive collation (if that's possible on triple data)?

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1 Answer 1

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You could use a filter that ignores case.

select * where {
  ?s ?p ?o
  FILTER (lcase(str(?o)) = "red")
}

Based on the answer to another question.

Edit: I asked Steve Buxton, MarkLogic's PM for semantics features, and he suggested this:

let $store := sem:store( (), cts:element-value-query(xs:QName("sem:object"), "red", "case-insensitive") )
return
  sem:sparql('
    SELECT ?o
    WHERE {
      ?s ?p ?o
      FILTER (lcase(str(?o)) = "red")
    }', (), (), $store
 )

sem:store is a MarkLogic 8 (now available through Early Access) function that selects a group of triples. The SPARQL query then runs on the reduced set, limiting the number of triples that need to be filtered.

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  • 3
    You can also use cts:contains. A string query (2nd-argument) is coerced to a cts:word-query, which is case-insensitive for lower-case strings.
    – joemfb
    Dec 2, 2014 at 19:49
  • 3
    @joemfb good suggestion, though it should be pointed out that those are product-specific extensions that are not part of the SPARQL standard, and so queries using them will not be portable to other SPARQL stores. Dec 2, 2014 at 21:56
  • Plus one as this is a good solution. Minus one because if it's based on another answer, there's a good chance that you should just flag the question as a duplicate. There's nothing the matter with a duplicate question, and it's better to have a canonical answer rather than lots of very similar questions floating around. Dec 2, 2014 at 22:23
  • It's the same question asked about different platforms, which allows for potentially different answers. Dec 3, 2014 at 12:03

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