This repository contains a collection of formal contexts to pursue Formal Concept Analysis.
The metadata for the contexts is contained in this YAML file.
More contexts can be found in the repository for ConExp-CLJ, the repository for the concepts Python module, and on Uta Priss' page.
You can either manually download contexts or you can access them
directly in your program code with a URL generated as follows: append
the file name of the context (e.g., livingbeings_en.cxt
) to the
prefix https://github.com/fcatools/contexts/raw/main/contexts/
. For
example, in Python 3 you could do:
import urllib.request
url = "https://github.com/fcatools/contexts/raw/main/contexts/livingbeings_en.cxt"
context = urllib.request.urlopen(url).read().decode("utf-8")
Additional formal contexts are highly welcome if they fulfil the following criteria:
- They should be about real things and not contain invented or random data.
- They should preferrably be small, that is, have not too many attributes and objects (each less than 100).
If you think your context is suitable, then proceed as follows:
- Fork this repository
and make the following changes in your fork:
- Add your ASCII-encoded CXT file to the
contexts
directory, using a meaningful name (English, all lowercase, with
two letters indicating the ISO 639 language
code
at the end, e.g.,
bodiesofwater_de.cxt
for the German bodies of water context). - Describe your context in contexts.yaml following the example of the other contexts. Try to be concise and precise.
- Add your ASCII-encoded CXT file to the
contexts
directory, using a meaningful name (English, all lowercase, with
two letters indicating the ISO 639 language
code
at the end, e.g.,
- Make a pull request to merge your changes into this repository.
The repository is managed by a working group that communicates using a mailing list.
The idea for the repository has been described in
Hanika, T., Jäschke, R.: A Repository for Formal Contexts. In: Cabrera, I.P., Ferré, S., and Obiedkov, S. (eds.) Conceptual Knowledge Structures. pp. 182–197. Springer Nature Switzerland, Cham 2024. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-67868-4_13