Patterns
Meta
This document describes various patterns for solving common problems, in ways that are not (yet) specified in any Frictionless Data specification. If we see increased adoption, or wide support, for any pattern, it is a prime candidate for formalising as part of a specification.
Private properties
Overview
Some software that implements the Frictionless Data specifications may need to store additional information on the various Frictionless Data descriptors.
For example, a data registry that provides metadata via datapackage.json
may wish to set an internal version or identifier that is system-specific, and should not be considered as part of the user-generated metadata.
Properties to store such information should be considered "private", and by convention, the names should be prefixed by an underscore _
.
Implementations
There are no known implementations at present.
Specification
On any Frictionless Data descriptor, data that is not generated by the author/contributors, but is generated by software/a system handling the data, SHOULD
be considered as "private", and be prefixed by an underscore _
.
To demonstrate, let's take the example of a data registry that implements datapackage.json
for storing dataset metadata.
A user might upload a datapackage.json
as follows:
{
"name": "my-package",
"resources": [
{
"name": "my-resource",
"data": [ "my-resource.csv" ]
}
]
}
The registry itself may have a platform-specific version system, and increment versions on each update of the data. To store this information on the datapackage itself, the platform could save this information in a "private" _platformVersion
property as follows:
{
"name": "my-package",
"_platformVersion": 7
"resources": [
{
"name": "my-resource",
"data": [ "my-resource.csv" ]
}
]
}
Usage of "private" properties ensures a clear distinction between data stored on the descriptor that is user (author/contributor) defined, and any additional data that may be stored by a 3rd party.
Caching of resources
Overview
All Frictionless Data specifications allow for referencing resources via http or a local filesystem.
In the case of remote resources via http, there is always the possibility that the remote server will be unavailable, or, that the resource itself will be temporarily or permanently removed.
Applications that are concerned with the persistent storage of data described in Frictionless Data specifications can use a _cache
property that mirrors the functionality and usage of the data
property, and refers to a storage location for the data that the application can fall back to if the canonical resource is unavailable.
Implementations
There are no known implementations of this pattern at present.
Specification
Implementations MAY
handle a _cache
property on any descriptor that supports a data
property. In the case that the data referenced in data
is unavailable, _cache
should be used as a fallback to access the data. The handling of the data stored at _cache
is beyond the scope of the specification. Implementations might store a copy of the resources in data
at ingestion time, update at regular intervals, or any other method to keep an up-to-date, persistent copy.
Some examples of the _cache
property.
{
"name": "my-package",
"resources": [
{
"name": "my-resource",
"data": [ "http://example.com/data/csv/my-resource.csv" ],
"_cache": "my-resource.csv"
},
{
"name": "my-resource",
"data": [ "http://example.com/data/csv/my-resource.csv" ],
"_cache": "http://data.registry.com/user/files/my-resource.csv"
},
{
"name": "my-resource",
"data": [
"http://example.com/data/csv/my-resource.csv",
"http://somewhere-else.com/data/csv/resource2.csv"
],
"_cache": [
"my-resource.csv",
"resource2.csv"
]
},
{
"name": "my-resource",
"data": [ "http://example.com/data/csv/my-resource.csv" ],
"_cache": "my-resource.csv"
}
]
}
Language support
Overview
Language support is a different concern to translation support. Language support deals with declaring the default language of a descriptor and the data it contains in the resources array. Language support makes no claim about the presence of translations when one or more languages are supported in a descriptor or in data. Via the introduction of a languages
array to any descriptor, we can declare the default language, and any other languages that SHOULD
be found in the descriptor and the data.
Implementations
There are no known implementations of this pattern at present.
Specification
Any Frictionless Data descriptor can declare the language configuration of its metadata and data with the languages
array.
languages
MUST
be an array, and the first item in the array is the default (non-translated) language.
If no languages
array is present, the default language is English (en
), and therefore is equivalent to:
{
"name": "my-package",
"languages": ["en"]
}
The presence of a languages array does not ensure that the metadata or the data has translations for all supported languages.
The descriptor and data sources MUST
be in the default language. The descriptor and data sources MAY
have translations for the other languages in the array, using the same language code. IF
a translation is not present, implementing code MUST
fallback to the default language string.
Example usage of languages
, implemented in the metadata of a descriptor:
{
"name": "sun-package",
"languages": ["es", "en"],
"title": "Sol"
}
# which is equivalent to
{
"name": "sun-package",
"languages": ["es", "en"],
"title": {
"": "Sol",
"en": "Sun"
}
}
Example usage of languages
implemented in the data described by a resource:
# resource descriptor
{
"name": "solar-system",
"data": [ "solar-system.csv" ]
"fields": [
...
],
"languages": ["es", "en", "he", "fr", "ar"]
}
# data source
# some languages have translations, some do not
# assumes a certain translation pattern, see the related section
id,name,name@fr,name@he,name@en
1,Sol,Soleil,שמש,Sun
2,Luna,Lune,ירח,Moon
Translation support
Overview
Following on from a general pattern for language support, and the explicit support of metadata translations in Frictionless Data descriptors, it would be desirable to support translations in source data.
We currently have two patterns for this in discussion. Both patterns arise from real-world implementations that are not specifically tied to Frictionless Data.
One pattern suggests inline translations with the source data, reserving the @
symbol in the naming of fields to denote translations.
The other describes a pattern for storing additional translation sources, co-located with the "source" file described in a descriptor data
.
Implementations
There are no known implementations of this pattern in the Frictionless Data core libraries at present.
Specification
Inline
Uses a column naming convention for accessing translations.
Tabular resource descriptors support translations using {field_name}@{lang_code}
syntax for translated field names. lang_code
MUST
be present in the languages
array that applies to the resource.
Any field with the @
symbol MUST
be a translation field for another field of data, and MUST
be parsable according to the {field_name}@{lang_code}
pattern.
If a translation field is found in the data that does not have a corresponding field
(e.g.: title@es
but no title
), then the translation field SHOULD
be ignored.
If a translation field is found in the data that uses a lang_code
not declared in the applied languages
array, then the translation field SHOULD
be ignored.
Translation fields MUST NOT
be described in a schema fields
array.
Translation fields MUST
match the type
, format
and constraints
of the field they translate, with a single exception: Translation fields are never required, and therefore constraints.required
is always false
for a translation field.
Co-located translation sources
Uses a file storage convention for accessing translations.
To be contributed by @jheeffer
- Has to handle local and remote resources
- Has to be explicit about the translation key/value pattern in the translation files
# local
data/file1.csv
data/lang/file1-en.csv
data/lang/file1-es.csv
# remote
http://example/com/data/file2.csv
http://example/com/data/lang/file2-en.csv
http://example/com/data/lang/file2-es.csv
Table Schema: Foreign Keys to Data Packages
Purpose: allow users to link from the column of a Tabular Data Resource in one Data Package to a Tabular Data Resource in another Data Package.
To support this:
The foreignKey
MAY have a property datapackage
. This property is a string being a url pointing to a Data Package or is the name of a datapackage.
Data Package Version
The Data Package version format follows the Semantic Versioning specification format: MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
The version numbers, and the way they change, convey meaning how the data package has been modified from one version to the next.
Given a Data Package version number MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH, increment the:
MAJOR version when you make incompatible changes, e.g.
- Change the table schema
- Change field or data package names or data package identifiers
- Add, remove or re-order fields
MINOR version when you add data in a backwards-compatible manner, e.g.
- Add new data to an existing data resource
- Add a new data resource
PATCH version when you make backwards-compatible fixes, e.g.
- Corrections to existing data
- Changes to metadata
Scenarios
- You are developing your data though public consultation. Start your initial data release at 0.1.0
- You release your data for the first time. Use version 1.0.0
- You append last months data to an existing release. Increment the MINOR version number
- You append a column to the data. Increment the MAJOR version number
- You relocate the data to a new
URL
orpath
. No change in the version number - You change a
title
,description
, or other descriptive metadata. Increment the PATCH version - You fix a data entry error by modifying a value. Increment the PATCH version
Data Dependencies
Consider a situation where data packages are part of a tool chain that, say, loads all of the data into an SQL db. You can then imagine a situation where one requires package A which requires package B + C.
In this case you want to specify that A depends on B and C -- and that "installing" A should install B and C. This is the purpose of dataDependencies
property.
Specification
dataDependencies
is an object. It follows same format as CommonJS Packages spec v1.1. Each dependency defines the lowest compatible MAJOR[.MINOR[.PATCH]] dependency versions (only one per MAJOR version) with which the package has been tested and is assured to work. The version may be a simple version string (see the version property for acceptable forms), or it may be an object group of dependencies which define a set of options, any one of which satisfies the dependency. The ordering of the group is significant and earlier entries have higher priority. Example:
"dataDependencies": {
"country-codes": "",
"unemployment": "2.1",
"geo-boundaries": {
"acmecorp-geo-boundaries": ["1.0", "2.0"],
"othercorp-geo-boundaries": "0.9.8",
},
}
Implementations
None known.