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The ERC webdam on foundations of web data management
- IN PROC. OF THE 21ST INT. WORLD WIDE WEB CONF. (WWW 2012
, 2012
"... The Webdam ERC grant is a five-year project that started in December 2008. The goal is to develop a formal model for Web data management that would open new horizons for the development of the Web in a well-principled way, enhancing its functionality, performance, and reliability. Specifically, the ..."
Abstract
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Cited by 2 (0 self)
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The Webdam ERC grant is a five-year project that started in December 2008. The goal is to develop a formal model for Web data management that would open new horizons for the development of the Web in a well-principled way, enhancing its functionality, performance, and reliability. Specifically
Author manuscript, published in "WWW (Companion Volume) (2012) 211-214" The ERC Webdam on Foundations of Web Data Management ∗
, 2012
"... The Webdam ERC grant is a five-year project that started in December 2008. The goal is to develop a formal model for Web data management that would open new horizons for the development of the Web in a well-principled way, enhancing its functionality, performance, and reliability. Specifically, the ..."
Abstract
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The Webdam ERC grant is a five-year project that started in December 2008. The goal is to develop a formal model for Web data management that would open new horizons for the development of the Web in a well-principled way, enhancing its functionality, performance, and reliability. Specifically
Author manuscript, published in "ICDT (2012) 46-60" Highly Expressive Query Languages for Unordered Data Trees ∗
, 2012
"... We study highly expressive query languages for unordered data trees, using as formal vehicles Active XML and extensions of languages in the while family. All languages may be seen as adding some form of control on top of a set of basic pattern queries. The results highlight the impact and interplay ..."
Abstract
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We study highly expressive query languages for unordered data trees, using as formal vehicles Active XML and extensions of languages in the while family. All languages may be seen as adding some form of control on top of a set of basic pattern queries. The results highlight the impact and interplay of different factors: the expressive power of basic queries, the embedding of computation into data (as in Active XML), and the use of deterministic vs. nondeterministic control. All languages are Turing complete, but not necessarily query complete in the sense of Chandra and Harel. Indeed, we show that some combinations of features yield serious limitations, analogous to FO k definability in the relational context. On the other hand, the limitations come with benefits such as the existence of powerful normal forms. Other languages are “almost ” complete, but fall short because of subtle limitations reminiscent of the copy elimination problem in object databases.