This repository contains a template for writing OWL ontologies as Org Mode documents, with supporting functions and scripts. ELOT works on Windows, MacOS, and Linux.
Literate programming is a paradigm where the creator of some technical artefact focuses on the explanation and readability of each technical construct, rather than its formal machine-readable definition. The machine-readable artefacts are then extracted through a process called "tangling".
ELOT takes inspiration from this paradigm and uses the excellent Emacs Orgmode plain-text format to create an author- and reader-friendly ontology authoring environment. Ontological constructs are generated from headlines and description lists. Export to OWL (OMN or Turtle) and documentation (HTML or PDF). Diagrams are generated from Turtle blocks or SPARQL queries using the rdfpuml tool.
NEW April 2025: Minimalistic templating from tables – handy when you need to add many similar-looking classes and don't need complex template expansion.
NEW March 2025:
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Convert OWL files to ELOT's org-mode format. Download the
jarbinary from releases, store aselot-exporter.jarin yourbin/and open existing OWL files with functionelot-open-owl. -
VS Code support: For instructions on how to run ELOT commands directly from within VS Code on your own projects, please see the detailed README.
- Download ELOT using Git to easily obtain updates
- Use a recent version (29+) of Emacs
- For viewing your ontologies, install Protégé Desktop
- Install Java to enable advanced features
See the GNU Emacs download page.
For new Windows users: download Emacs from a GNU mirror; the latest
version is in the emacs-30 directory. The package named
emacs-30.1-installer.exe will work fine (as of 2025-03-11). It's
preferable to install into a folder that doesn't contain spaces.
If you are new to Emacs, the book Mastering Emacs is highly recommended.
ELOT is in active development. For easy access to updates, you should clone the ELOT repository using Git.
-
Create a directory for local Emacs add-ons in your home folder, named
elisp(on Windows, that will likely meanc:\Users\myname�lisp\). -
Clone ELOT into the
elispfolder using your Git client. If using a terminal for Git, the following will do it.cd elisp git clone https://github.com/johanwk/elot.gitYou should now have a subfolder of
elispcalledelot. -
Ensure ELOT is loaded when Emacs starts up.
- For new Emacs users: find the file
elot-init.elinside theelotfolder, and copy it to a new file named.emacsin your home folder, then restart Emacs. You should now be looking at a basic, working Emacs configuration. - Experienced Emacs users should open
elot-init.eland look at the list of packages that are required. Add~/elisp/elot/elot-package/to yourload-path.
- For new Emacs users: find the file
ELOT relies on external software programs to query your ontologies and produce diagrams. These need to be downloaded.
Preparatory steps, if needed:
- Create a directory named
binin your home folder: you will download programs to this folder. On Windows, that will meanc:\Users\myname�in\; also ensure the environment variableHOMEis set (check issue 83). - Ensure the
binfolder is on your PATH, so the programs can be found by ELOT. On Windows, use the Control Panel to edit Local Environment Variables and addc:\Users\myname�in\to the list.
Get the tools:
- The ROBOT tool is highly recommended for ELOT. Download robot.jar
from the ROBOT releases page to your
binfolder. - The PlantUML tool is needed for diagrams.
Download the latest version from PlantUML Downloads (tested with plantuml-1.2024.3.jar)
to your
binfolder. For convenience, rename it as justplantuml.jar(on Linux, make a symlink). - The rdfpuml tool will produce great-looking diagrams for
ontologies.
-
On Windows, download rdfpuml.exe to your
binfolder. -
On Linux or MacOS, clone the repository to your
binfolder, then add~/bin/rdf2rml/bin/to your PATH. Install Perl modules as listed in the rdfpuml installation guide.cd ~/bin git clone https://github.com/VladimirAlexiev/rdf2rml.git
-
- The
elot-exportertool converts existing OWL ontologies to ELOT's org-mode format. Once downloaded, you can open an OWL ontology from a local file, or from a URL, withM-x elot-open-owl.- download the latest Java JAR from releases and save it as
elot-exporter.jarin yourbinfolder.
- download the latest Java JAR from releases and save it as
Open the familiar Pizza ontology from elisp/elot/examples/pizza.org
for an example of what an ELOT file will look like. Check the menu bar
to locate the ELOT menu.
To create a new ontology, do this in Emacs:
-
Select a directory that you want to work in. Open a new Org Mode file, for instance
myontology.org. -
Insert the ELOT template for a document header. From the bottom of the ELOT menu, select Insert New Ontology Document Header. Answer the prompts, and a header is produced, like the following.
# -*- eval: (load-library "elot-defaults") -*- #+title: My new ontology #+subtitle: An OWL ontology #+author: John Doe #+date: WIP (version of 2024-04-04 12:34) -
Insert the ELOT template for an ontology skeleton: menu entry Insert New Ontology Skeleton. Answer the prompts – be ready to provide namespaces/prefixes for your ontology and the resources it will contain. You should see something like this screenshot:
Now create an OWL file from your new document.
- Menu entry Export to OWL will "tangle" the ontology to a file
in OWL Manchester Syntax, e.g., with filename
myontology.omn. - If you have installed ROBOT, a Turtle file named
myontology.ttlwill also be generated. - Have Protégé ready, and open the ontology file to inspect it.
- Export to an HTML document with menu entry Export to HTML. The document will open in your web browser.
- Navigate to the
Classesheading - Select Insert Primitive/Defined Class template from the menu to declare a class. Some appropriate annotation properties from the Industrial Ontology Foundry Annotation Vocabulary (IOF-AV) are included.
- Navigate to the
Object propertiesheading - Select Insert Property template for an object, data, or annotation property.
- The screenshot shows how checkboxes are included for tracking progress. These are completely optional and won't appear in output.
ELOT makes it easy to add annotations to both annotations and axioms: just put them in a description list (~ - term :: value~). In this screenshot, two annotations are added to the "transitive" characteristic axiom:
- Navigate to the
Prefixesheading and insert a new heading named "Queries". - Select menu item Insert SPARQL Select Block, then write a query over the ontology.
- Hit
C-c C-cto run the query.
- A SPARQL construct query will produce Turtle code for a diagram. Select Insert SPARQL Construct Block.
- Write a query and hit
C-c C-cto run it.
- Select Insert RDFPUML Diagram Block.
- When prompted, provide the name of the Turtle source (the name of the construct query) and a figure caption.
- Place the cursor on the row of the
#+call:and hitC-c C-c. A diagram is generated.
- Select Export to HTML to view your ontology in a browser.
ELOT can display readable labels instead of prefixed identifiers (which are unreadable if the identifiers are not informative), and offers quick search across the ontology resources. Hit F5 to toggle.
ELOT supports cross-referencing and navigation using Emacs’s built-in
xref system. This allows users to find where a resource is used
and to jump directly to its definition from anywhere in an ELOT buffer.
To find all references to a CURIE (e.g., :BFO_0000015), place the cursor
on it and type M-? (xref-find-references). The *xref* buffer will open
and show each occurrence, along with the heading and flattened description
list entry for context.
Inside the *xref* buffer:
- Press
RETto jump to the occurrence. - Move the cursor to any other CURIE and press
M-.(xref-find-definitions) to jump to its definition (typically the Org headline where it's declared).
Label overlays are enabled automatically in the *xref* buffer, so
identifiers appear with readable labels if available. This makes it easier
to explore large ontologies interactively.
This functionality is activated automatically for Org files exported with ELOT startup code and does not require additional setup.
HTML output from ELOT produces stable anchors for ontology resources,
and shows readable labels with internal, clickable links.










