Project

General

Profile

Element Expression » History » Version 2

Robert Bossy, 08/23/2011 04:24 PM

1 1 Robert Bossy
{{toc}}
2 1 Robert Bossy
3 1 Robert Bossy
h1. Introduction
4 1 Robert Bossy
5 1 Robert Bossy
Element Expressions is a language for exploring and querying the AlvisNLP Corpus. It can be used to test features, count elements, retrieve annotations with certain characteristics, etc. This language shares a lot of common points 
6 1 Robert Bossy
7 1 Robert Bossy
8 1 Robert Bossy
h1. Context Element
9 1 Robert Bossy
10 1 Robert Bossy
Expressions are evaluated within a context that includes an element. The context element can be one of the following:
11 1 Robert Bossy
* the corpus
12 1 Robert Bossy
* a document
13 1 Robert Bossy
* a section
14 1 Robert Bossy
* an annotation
15 1 Robert Bossy
* a relation
16 1 Robert Bossy
* a tuple
17 1 Robert Bossy
18 1 Robert Bossy
Some expressions are independent of the context element; their evaluation does not depend on it (for instance arithmetic operators). However the most useful expressions depend on the context element, for instance the evaluation of a feature value expression obviously depends on the context element. Wherever an expression is expected, for instance as a module parameter, the context element sould be documented.
19 1 Robert Bossy
20 1 Robert Bossy
h1. Evaluation types
21 1 Robert Bossy
22 1 Robert Bossy
An expression can be evaluated as on of four types: boolean, number, string or element list. The evaluation type should be documented along with the context element.
23 1 Robert Bossy
24 1 Robert Bossy
h2. Scalar types
25 1 Robert Bossy
26 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Boolean
27 1 Robert Bossy
28 1 Robert Bossy
The boolean type has two values: @false@ and @true@.
29 1 Robert Bossy
30 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Number
31 1 Robert Bossy
32 1 Robert Bossy
The number type is a double precision 64-bit floating point number (Java @double@).
33 1 Robert Bossy
34 1 Robert Bossy
h3. String
35 1 Robert Bossy
36 1 Robert Bossy
The string type is a 16-bit unicode character sequence (Java @String@).
37 1 Robert Bossy
38 1 Robert Bossy
h2. Element list
39 1 Robert Bossy
40 1 Robert Bossy
The element list type is an ordered collection of elements. In most cases elements in an element list are of the same type (all Annotations or all Documents etc.).
41 1 Robert Bossy
42 1 Robert Bossy
h2. Type coercion
43 1 Robert Bossy
44 1 Robert Bossy
The majority of expressions have a priviledged or primary evaluation type, however they can be evaluated into another type. The value is computed using type coercion rules:
45 1 Robert Bossy
46 1 Robert Bossy
|       |*boolean*|*number*|*string*|*list*|
47 1 Robert Bossy
|*boolean*||false=0, true=1|false="false", true="true"|empty list|
48 1 Robert Bossy
|*number* |0=false, otherwise true||decimal notation string|empty list|
49 1 Robert Bossy
|*string* |""=false, otherwise true|decimal conversion||empty list|
50 1 Robert Bossy
|*list*   |empty=false, otherwise true|element count|concatenation of static features||
51 1 Robert Bossy
52 1 Robert Bossy
Some expressions have specific coercion rules.
53 1 Robert Bossy
54 1 Robert Bossy
h1. Operator precedence and associativity
55 1 Robert Bossy
56 1 Robert Bossy
The following operators are listed in descending order of precedence. The precedence can be overriden with parentheses.
57 1 Robert Bossy
58 1 Robert Bossy
|*Operators*|*Associative*|
59 1 Robert Bossy
|@if then else@|no|
60 1 Robert Bossy
|@or@|yes|
61 1 Robert Bossy
|@and@|yes|
62 1 Robert Bossy
|@not@|no|
63 1 Robert Bossy
|@== != < > <= >= ?= ^= =^ =~ in any@|no|
64 1 Robert Bossy
|@^@|yes|
65 1 Robert Bossy
|@+ -@|yes|
66 1 Robert Bossy
|@* / %@|yes|
67 1 Robert Bossy
|unary @-@|no|
68 1 Robert Bossy
|pipe|yes|
69 1 Robert Bossy
|@.@|yes|
70 1 Robert Bossy
71 1 Robert Bossy
h1. Syntax for names
72 1 Robert Bossy
73 1 Robert Bossy
Some expressions require a name (feature key or layer name for instance). Names are single quote character sequences. The quotes can be omitted if all the following conditions are met:
74 1 Robert Bossy
* all characters are alphabetic (@A-Za-z@) or undescore (@_@)
75 1 Robert Bossy
* the name is different from any reserved word:
76 1 Robert Bossy
|@after@|
77 1 Robert Bossy
|@and@|
78 1 Robert Bossy
|@any@|
79 1 Robert Bossy
|@args@|
80 1 Robert Bossy
|@before@|
81 1 Robert Bossy
|@boolean@|
82 1 Robert Bossy
|@contents@|
83 1 Robert Bossy
|@corpus@|
84 1 Robert Bossy
|@document@|
85 1 Robert Bossy
|@documents@|
86 1 Robert Bossy
|@elements@|
87 1 Robert Bossy
|@else@|
88 1 Robert Bossy
|@end@|
89 1 Robert Bossy
|@false@|
90 1 Robert Bossy
|@if@|
91 1 Robert Bossy
|@in@|
92 1 Robert Bossy
|@inside@|
93 1 Robert Bossy
|@layer@|
94 1 Robert Bossy
|@length@|
95 1 Robert Bossy
|@not@|
96 1 Robert Bossy
|@number@|
97 1 Robert Bossy
|@or@|
98 1 Robert Bossy
|@outside@|
99 1 Robert Bossy
|@overlapping@|
100 1 Robert Bossy
|@relation@|
101 1 Robert Bossy
|@relations@|
102 1 Robert Bossy
|@section@|
103 1 Robert Bossy
|@sections@|
104 1 Robert Bossy
|@start@|
105 1 Robert Bossy
|@string@|
106 1 Robert Bossy
|@then@|
107 1 Robert Bossy
|@true@|
108 1 Robert Bossy
|@tuples@|
109 1 Robert Bossy
110 2 Robert Bossy
Note that names and keywords are case-sensitive. All keywords are all lowercase.
111 1 Robert Bossy
112 1 Robert Bossy
h1. Expression reference
113 1 Robert Bossy
114 2 Robert Bossy
In the following sections each available expression is described. The usage of the expression is given in preformatted paragraphs with the following conventions:
115 1 Robert Bossy
116 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
117 2 Robert Bossy
  EXPR         uppercase words are variable parts of the expression usage, they are meant to be replaced either by sub-expressions, names or constants
118 2 Robert Bossy
  layer        lowercase words are keywords
119 2 Robert Bossy
  [ ... ]      parts between brackets are optional
120 2 Robert Bossy
  ( ) . + :    all other sylmbols are operators, parenthes or a column, they are part of the expression syntax
121 2 Robert Bossy
</pre>
122 2 Robert Bossy
123 2 Robert Bossy
If there is a preferred type for the expression, then this type is specified between brackets in the expression name.
124 2 Robert Bossy
125 2 Robert Bossy
h3. Boolean constant [boolean]
126 2 Robert Bossy
127 2 Robert Bossy
<pre>
128 1 Robert Bossy
  false
129 1 Robert Bossy
  true
130 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
131 1 Robert Bossy
132 2 Robert Bossy
h3. Integer constant [number]
133 1 Robert Bossy
134 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
135 1 Robert Bossy
  [0-9]+
136 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
137 1 Robert Bossy
138 2 Robert Bossy
h3. String constants [string]
139 1 Robert Bossy
140 2 Robert Bossy
<pre>
141 2 Robert Bossy
  "..."
142 2 Robert Bossy
</pre>
143 2 Robert Bossy
144 1 Robert Bossy
String constants are double quoted character sequences. The usual Java escape sequences apply.
145 1 Robert Bossy
146 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Boolean operators [boolean]
147 1 Robert Bossy
148 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
149 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT and RIGHT
150 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT or RIGHT
151 1 Robert Bossy
  not EXPR
152 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
153 1 Robert Bossy
154 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@, @RIGHT@ and @EXPR@ are evaluated as booleans with the same context element.
155 1 Robert Bossy
Binary boolean operator evaluation is short-circuited.
156 1 Robert Bossy
157 1 Robert Bossy
h3. General comparison [boolean]
158 1 Robert Bossy
159 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
160 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT == RIGHT
161 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT != RIGHT
162 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
163 1 Robert Bossy
164 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@ and @RIGHT@ are evaluated as the same type with the same context element. If @LEFT@ is an expression of scalar type, then its type is used. Otherwise, the type of @RIGHT@ is used.
165 1 Robert Bossy
166 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Integer comparison [boolean]
167 1 Robert Bossy
168 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
169 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT < RIGHT
170 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT > RIGHT
171 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT <= RIGHT
172 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT >= RIGHT
173 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
174 1 Robert Bossy
175 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@ and @RIGHT@ are evaluated as numbers using the same context element.
176 1 Robert Bossy
177 1 Robert Bossy
h3. String comparison [boolean]
178 1 Robert Bossy
179 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
180 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT ?= RIGHT
181 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT ^= RIGHT
182 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT =^ RIGHT
183 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
184 1 Robert Bossy
185 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@ and @RIGHT@ are evaluated as strings using the same context element.
186 1 Robert Bossy
Meaning of operators:
187 1 Robert Bossy
|@?=@|contains|
188 1 Robert Bossy
|@^=@|starts with|
189 1 Robert Bossy
|@=^@|ends with|
190 1 Robert Bossy
191 1 Robert Bossy
h3. String concatenation [string]
192 1 Robert Bossy
193 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
194 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT ^ RIGHT
195 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
196 1 Robert Bossy
197 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@ and @RIGHT@ are evaluated as strings with the same context element.
198 1 Robert Bossy
199 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Regexp match
200 1 Robert Bossy
201 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
202 1 Robert Bossy
  TARGET =~ "PATTERN"
203 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
204 1 Robert Bossy
205 1 Robert Bossy
@TARGET@ is evaluated as a string with the same context element. @"PATTERN"@ is a string constant containing a regular expression in "Java syntax":http://download.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/regex/Pattern.html
206 1 Robert Bossy
If evaluated as a boolean, then this expression returns either the target matches the pattern.
207 1 Robert Bossy
If evaluated as a number, then this expression returns the number of non-overlapping matches of the pattern in the target.
208 1 Robert Bossy
If evaluated as a string, then this expression returns the first match of the pattern in the target.
209 1 Robert Bossy
If evaluated as an element list, then this expression returns an empty list.
210 1 Robert Bossy
211 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Arithmetic [number]
212 1 Robert Bossy
213 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
214 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT + RIGHT
215 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT - RIGHT
216 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT * RIGHT
217 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT / RIGHT
218 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT % RIGHT
219 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
220 1 Robert Bossy
221 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@ and @RIGHT@ are both evaluated as numbers with the same context element.
222 1 Robert Bossy
223 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Unary minus [number]
224 1 Robert Bossy
225 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
226 1 Robert Bossy
  - EXPR
227 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
228 1 Robert Bossy
229 1 Robert Bossy
@EXPR@ is evaluated as a number with the same context element.
230 1 Robert Bossy
231 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Dictionary lookup [boolean]
232 1 Robert Bossy
233 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
234 1 Robert Bossy
  EXPR in "FILE"[:"ENCODING"]
235 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
236 1 Robert Bossy
237 1 Robert Bossy
@EXPR@ is evaluated as a string with the same context element. @"FILE"@ is a string constant containg the path to a dictionary file. @"ENCODING"@ is a string constant containing the name of the dictionary file character set. If the encoding is omitted, UTF-8 is assumed.
238 1 Robert Bossy
The dictionary file must contain one entry per line. This expression returns true if and only if the dictionary contains the first operand.
239 1 Robert Bossy
240 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Feature
241 1 Robert Bossy
242 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
243 1 Robert Bossy
  KEY
244 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
245 1 Robert Bossy
246 1 Robert Bossy
@KEY@ is a name. This expression returns the last value of the feature with key @KEY@ of context element.
247 1 Robert Bossy
If this expression is evaluated as a boolean, then it returns @true@ if and only if the context element has a feature with key @KEY@, +even if the feature value is an empty string+.
248 1 Robert Bossy
249 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Any feature value equals
250 1 Robert Bossy
251 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
252 1 Robert Bossy
  any @KEY@ == @EXPR@
253 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
254 1 Robert Bossy
255 1 Robert Bossy
@KEY@ is a name. @EXPR@ is evaluated as a string with the same context element.
256 1 Robert Bossy
This expression returns true if at least one of the values of the feature with key @KEY@ in the context element equals @EXPR@.
257 1 Robert Bossy
258 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Annotation positions [number]
259 1 Robert Bossy
260 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
261 1 Robert Bossy
  start
262 1 Robert Bossy
  end
263 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
264 1 Robert Bossy
265 1 Robert Bossy
These expressions return the start or end position if the context element is an annotation. Otherwise it returns @0@.
266 1 Robert Bossy
267 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Element length [number]
268 1 Robert Bossy
269 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
270 1 Robert Bossy
  length
271 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
272 1 Robert Bossy
273 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is an annotation, then this expression returns its length.
274 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is a section, then this expression returns returns the length of the section's contents.
275 1 Robert Bossy
276 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Reference
277 1 Robert Bossy
278 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
279 1 Robert Bossy
  $REF
280 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
281 1 Robert Bossy
282 1 Robert Bossy
@REF@ is a name. This expression returns the value of the named reference.
283 1 Robert Bossy
Available references should be documented by the module.
284 1 Robert Bossy
285 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Section contents [string]
286 1 Robert Bossy
287 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
288 1 Robert Bossy
  contents
289 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
290 1 Robert Bossy
291 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is a section, then this expression returns its contents. Otherwise the empty string is returned.
292 1 Robert Bossy
293 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Conditional
294 1 Robert Bossy
295 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
296 1 Robert Bossy
  if CONDITION then TRUE else TRUE
297 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
298 1 Robert Bossy
299 1 Robert Bossy
@CONDITION@ is evaluated as a boolean with the same context element. If the result is, then @TRUE@ is evaluated as the same type with the same context element. Otherwise @FALSE@ is evaluated as the same type with the same context element.
300 1 Robert Bossy
301 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Union [list]
302 1 Robert Bossy
303 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
304 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT | RIGHT
305 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
306 1 Robert Bossy
307 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@ and @RIGHT@ are evaluated as element lists with the same context element. This expression returns the concatenation of the two results.
308 1 Robert Bossy
Elements in the result list are not reordered. Duplicate lements remain.
309 1 Robert Bossy
310 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Path
311 1 Robert Bossy
312 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
313 1 Robert Bossy
  LEFT . RIGHT
314 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
315 1 Robert Bossy
316 1 Robert Bossy
@LEFT@ is evaluated as an element list with the same context element, then each element of the result is used as the context element to evaluate @RIGHT@.
317 1 Robert Bossy
If this expression is evaluated as a boolean, then it retuns @true@ if any evaluation of @RIGHT@ as a boolean is true.
318 1 Robert Bossy
If this expression is evaluated as a number, then it returns the sum of all successive evaluations of @RIGHT@ as a number.
319 1 Robert Bossy
If this expression is evaluated as a string, then it returns the concatenation of all successive evaluations of @RIGHT@ as a string.
320 1 Robert Bossy
If this expression is evaluated as a list, then it returns the concatenation of all successive evaluations of @RIGHT@ as a list.
321 1 Robert Bossy
322 1 Robert Bossy
h2. Element navigation expressions [list]
323 1 Robert Bossy
324 1 Robert Bossy
Element navigation expressions returns elements according to a navigation specification. The following subsections describe each available specification.
325 1 Robert Bossy
A specification can be followed by filters and ranges. The order of filter and ranges specifies the order in which they are applied. If a range follows a filter, then range is applied after the filter.
326 1 Robert Bossy
327 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Filters
328 1 Robert Bossy
329 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
330 1 Robert Bossy
  SPEC ( EXPR )
331 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
332 1 Robert Bossy
333 1 Robert Bossy
@SPEC@ is a navigation specification. @EXPR@ is evaluated as a boolean with the current element as the context element.
334 1 Robert Bossy
The expression returns the list of elements for which @EXPR@ was evaluated as @true@.
335 1 Robert Bossy
336 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Ranges
337 1 Robert Bossy
338 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
339 1 Robert Bossy
  SPEC ( N )
340 1 Robert Bossy
  SPEC ( N : M)
341 1 Robert Bossy
  SPEC ( : M )
342 1 Robert Bossy
  SPEC ( N : )
343 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
344 1 Robert Bossy
345 1 Robert Bossy
@SPEC@ is a navigation specification. @N@ and @M@ are integer constants.
346 1 Robert Bossy
The returned list is a sublist of the list returned by @SPEC@:
347 1 Robert Bossy
|@N@|a singleton list with the @N@th element|
348 1 Robert Bossy
|@N : M@|the sublist from the @N@th (inclusive) to the @M@th (exclusive) elements|
349 1 Robert Bossy
|@: M@|the sublist from the start to the @M@th element (exlusive)|
350 1 Robert Bossy
|@N :@|the sublist from the @N@th element (inclusive) to the end|
351 1 Robert Bossy
List indexes are zero-based: @0@ is the first, @1@ is the second, etc. If @N@ or @M@ are negative, then the length of the list + 1 is added to their value: @-1@ is the last (inclusive).
352 1 Robert Bossy
If the indexes are out of the list boundaries then the index is "cropped".
353 1 Robert Bossy
354 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Element corpus
355 1 Robert Bossy
356 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
357 1 Robert Bossy
  corpus
358 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
359 1 Robert Bossy
360 1 Robert Bossy
This expression returns the currently annotated corpus.
361 1 Robert Bossy
362 2 Robert Bossy
h3. Element document
363 2 Robert Bossy
364 2 Robert Bossy
<pre>
365 2 Robert Bossy
  document
366 2 Robert Bossy
</pre>
367 2 Robert Bossy
368 2 Robert Bossy
This expression returns a singleton list containing the document to which the context element belongs.
369 2 Robert Bossy
If the context element is a document, then this document is returned.
370 2 Robert Bossy
If the context element is the corpus, then the empty list is returned.
371 2 Robert Bossy
372 2 Robert Bossy
h3. Element section
373 2 Robert Bossy
374 2 Robert Bossy
This expression returns a singleton list containing the section to which the context element belongs.
375 2 Robert Bossy
If the context element is a section, then this section is returned.
376 2 Robert Bossy
If the context element is the corpus or a document, then the empty list is returned.
377 2 Robert Bossy
378 2 Robert Bossy
h3. Tuple relation
379 2 Robert Bossy
380 2 Robert Bossy
<pre>
381 2 Robert Bossy
  relation
382 2 Robert Bossy
</pre>
383 2 Robert Bossy
384 2 Robert Bossy
If the context element is a tuple, then this element returns a singleton list with the relation to which the tuple belongs. Otherwise it returns the empty list.
385 2 Robert Bossy
386 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Corpus documents
387 1 Robert Bossy
388 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
389 1 Robert Bossy
  documents [ : ID ]
390 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
391 1 Robert Bossy
392 1 Robert Bossy
@ID@ is a name. If the context element is the corpus, then this expression returns a singleton list containing the document with the identifier @ID@. If @ID@ is omitted, then this expression returns a list containing all documents in the corpus.
393 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is not the corpus, or there is no document in the corpus, or there is no document with the specified identifier, then this expression returns the empty list.
394 1 Robert Bossy
395 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Document sections
396 1 Robert Bossy
397 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
398 1 Robert Bossy
  sections [ : NAME ]
399 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
400 1 Robert Bossy
401 1 Robert Bossy
@NAME@ is a name. If the context element is a document, then this expression returns a list containing all sections in the document with the name @NAME@. If @NAME@ is omitted, then this expression returns all sections of the document.
402 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is not a document, or there is no section in the document, or there is no section with the specified name, then this expression returns the empty list.
403 1 Robert Bossy
404 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Section annotations
405 1 Robert Bossy
406 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
407 1 Robert Bossy
  layer [ : NAME ]
408 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
409 1 Robert Bossy
410 1 Robert Bossy
@NAME@ is a name. If the context element is a section, then this expression returns a list containing all annotations in the layer named @NAME@. If @NAME@ is omitted, then this expression returns all annotations of all layers of the section.
411 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is not a section, or there is no layer with the specified name, or there is no annotation in the section, or the layer with the specified name is empty, then this expression returns the empty list.
412 1 Robert Bossy
413 1 Robert Bossy
In all cases, the list of annotations is sorted by standard order (increasing start, then decreasing end) and duplicates are removed.
414 1 Robert Bossy
415 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Section relations
416 1 Robert Bossy
417 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
418 1 Robert Bossy
  relations [ : NAME ]
419 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
420 1 Robert Bossy
421 1 Robert Bossy
@NAME@ is a name. If the context element is a section, then this expression returns a singleton list containing the relation in the section with the name @NAME@. If @NAME@ is omitted, then this expression returns all relations of the section.
422 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is not a section, or there is no relation in the section, or there is no relation with the specified name, then this expression returns the empty list.
423 1 Robert Bossy
424 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Relation tuples
425 1 Robert Bossy
426 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
427 1 Robert Bossy
  tuples
428 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
429 1 Robert Bossy
430 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is a relation, then this expression returns a list of all tuples of the relation. Otherwise it returns the empty list.
431 1 Robert Bossy
432 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Tuple arguments
433 1 Robert Bossy
434 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
435 1 Robert Bossy
  args [ : ROLE ]
436 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
437 1 Robert Bossy
438 1 Robert Bossy
@ROLE@ is a name. If the context element is a tuple, then this expression returns a singleton list containing the annotation which is the argument of the tuple with the role @ROLE@. If @ROLE@ is omitted, then this expression returns a list containg all arguments of the tuple (in no particular order).
439 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is not a tuple, or the tuple has no arguments, or if the tuple does not have an argument with the specified role, then this expression returns the empty list.
440 1 Robert Bossy
441 1 Robert Bossy
h3. Reverse tuple lookup
442 1 Robert Bossy
443 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
444 1 Robert Bossy
  tuples : RELATION [ : ROLE ]
445 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
446 1 Robert Bossy
447 1 Robert Bossy
@RELATION@ and @ROLE@ are names. If the context element is an annotation, then this expression retuerns a list containing all tuples that satisfy all the following conditions:
448 1 Robert Bossy
# the tuple pertain to the relation with name @RELATION@ in the same section
449 1 Robert Bossy
# the annotation is the argument of the tuple with role @ROLE@, if @ROLE@ is omitted, then the annotation is an argument of the tuple regardless of the role
450 1 Robert Bossy
If the context element is not an annotation, or the section does not contain a relation with the specified name, then this expression returns the empty list.
451 1 Robert Bossy
452 2 Robert Bossy
h3. Annotation siblings
453 1 Robert Bossy
454 1 Robert Bossy
<pre>
455 2 Robert Bossy
  after : NAME
456 2 Robert Bossy
  before : NAME
457 2 Robert Bossy
  inside : NAME
458 2 Robert Bossy
  outside : NAME
459 2 Robert Bossy
  overlapping : NAME
460 1 Robert Bossy
</pre>
461 1 Robert Bossy
462 2 Robert Bossy
If the context element is an annotation, then this expression returns a list of annotations in the layer with name @NAME@ in the same section. The annotations included in the result list depend on the keyword:
463 1 Robert Bossy
464 2 Robert Bossy
|@after@|start after the context annotation end|
465 2 Robert Bossy
|@before@|end before the context annotation start|
466 2 Robert Bossy
|@inside@|fully included in the context annotation span|
467 2 Robert Bossy
|@outside@|fully includes the context annotation|
468 2 Robert Bossy
|@overlapping@|overlaps (broad sense) the context annotation|
469 1 Robert Bossy
470 2 Robert Bossy
If the context element is not an annotation, or the section does not have a layer with the specified name, then this expression returns the empty list.
471 2 Robert Bossy
In all cases, the returned list is sorted in standard order.