Relations: Difference between revisions

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In order to form a natural language sentence or a UNL graph, [[nodes]] are inter-related by relations.
The relation "and" or "or" between the strings "a" and "b" (use regular expressions)
 
does it work? /.{2,3}/("a";"b")
== Basic Symbols ==
{{:Basic Symbols}}
 
== Notation ==
Relations are represented by the general syntax
rel(arg1;arg2;...;arg2)
Where
*''rel'' is the name of the relation; and
*''arg1'', ''arg2'', ..., are the arguments of the relation, i.e., [[node]]s.
 
== Types ==
In the UNL framework, there can be three different types of relations:
*the '''linear''' relation L expresses the surface (list) structure of natural language sentences
*'''[[syntactic relations]]''' express the syntactic (tree) structure of natural language sentences
*'''[[semantic relations]]''' express the semantic (graph) structure of UNL graphs
 
== Examples ==
Examples of relations:
*("a")("b") (a linear relation between two nodes: one having the string "a" and the other having the string "b"
*L("a";"b") (the same as above)
*VC(V;NP)  (a syntactic relation VC between two nodes: one having the feature V and the other having the feature NP
*VC("a",V;"b",[[b]],LEX=N,NP) (a syntactic relation VC between two nodes: one having the string "a" and the feature V; and the other having the string "b", the UW [[b]] and the features LEX=N and NP)
*agt("kill";N) (a semantic relation between two nodes: one having the string "kill" and the other having the feature N.
 
== Properties ==
;The linear relation is always binary and is represented in two possible formats:
*L(%x;%y) or
*(%x)(%y)
where L is the invariant name of the linear relation, and %x and %y are nodes.
;Syntactic relations are not predefined, although we have been using a set of binary relations based on the [[syntactic relations|X-bar theory]].
;Semantic relations constitute a predefined and closed set that can be found [[Universal Relations|here]].
;Arguments of relations are not commutative.
:The order of the elements in a relation affects the result:
::(%x)(%y) is different from (%y)(%x)
::relation(%x;%y) is different from relation(%y;%x)
;Linear and semantic relations are always binary; syntactic relations may be n-ary:
:L(%x;%y) - linear relation
:agt(%x;%y) - semantic relation
:VH(%x) - unary syntactic relation
:VC(%x;%y) - binary syntactic relation
:XX(%x;%y;%z) - possible ternary syntactic relation
;Inside each relation, nodes are isolated by semicolon (;).
:VC(%x;%y)
:<strike>VC(%x,%y)</strike>
;Inside each relation, nodes may be referenced by any of its elements, isolated by comma (,):
:("a")([b]) - linear relation between a node where string = "a" and another node where headword = [b]
:L(<nowiki>[[c]]</nowiki>;D) - linear relation between a node where UW = <nowiki>[[c]]</nowiki> and another node having the feature D
:VC(%a;%b) - syntactic relation between a node where index = %a and another node where index = %b
:agt("a",[a],<nowiki>[[a]]</nowiki>,A;"b",[b],<nowiki>[[b]]</nowiki>,B) - semantic relation between a node having the feature A where string = "a" AND headword "a" AND UW = <nowiki>[[a]]</nowiki> AND another node having the feature B where string = "b" AND headword = [b] AND UW = <nowiki>[[b]]</nowiki>
;Relations may be conjoined through juxtaposition:
:("a")("b")("c") - two linear relations: one between ("a") and ("b") AND other between ("b") and ("c")
:agt(%x;%y)obj(%x;%z) - two semantic relations: one between (%x) and (%y) AND other between (%x) and (%z)
:<strike>VC([a];[b]),VC([a];[c])</strike> - conjoined relations must not be isolated by comma
;Relations may be disjoined through {braces}
:{("a")|("b")}("c") - either ("a")("c") or ("b")("c")
:{agt(%x;%y)|exp(%x;%y)}obj(%x;%z) - either agt(%x;%y)obj(%x;%z) or exp(%x;%y)obj(%x;%z)
;Syntactic and semantic relations may be replaced by regular expressions
:/.{2,3}/(%x;%y) - any relation made of two or three characters between %x and %y

Latest revision as of 18:06, 23 May 2014

The relation "and" or "or" between the strings "a" and "b" (use regular expressions) does it work? /.{2,3}/("a";"b")