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Essentially replaces serd_buffer_sink_finish() with serd_buffer_close(), which
makes writing to a buffer consistent with writing to a file or anything else.
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This is a common convention in Turtle and TriG because the special "a" syntax
for rdf type as the first property looks nice, makes things easier to read, and
can be useful for streaming implementations because the type of the instance is
known before reading its properties.
Also significantly clean up the pretty-printing implementation in the process.
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Especially with the new functionality, the complexity of the command-line
interface alone was really becoming unmanageable. The serdi implementation
also had the highest cyclomatic complexity of the entire codebase by a huge
margin.
So, take a page from the Unix philosophy and split serdi into several more
finely-honed tools that can be freely composed. Though there is still
unfortunately quite a bit of option overlap between them due to the common
details of reading RDF, I think the resulting tools are a lot easier to
understand, both from a user and a developer perspective.
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Though potentially useful, I don't think the complexity cost of the old
interface (both to the implementation and to the user) is worth it. A special
tool to transform blank node labels (for example with regular expressions)
would be a better approach to this if it's ever needed in the future.
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Although the "verbatim" idea is nice and simple, more fine-grained control is
necessary since these features (relative URI preservation and blank node label
clash avoidance) are useful in different situations.
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This simplifies everything by replacing special cases with a more general close
function. A type is no longer stored in the structure, so the other
constructors are now essentially syntactic sugar for the universal
serd_byte_sink_new_function().
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This separates the command-line tool code from the library implementation.
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