- From: Frans Knibbe <frans.knibbe@geodan.nl>
- Date: Fri, 2 Oct 2015 16:16:45 +0200
- To: Jeremy Tandy <jeremy.tandy@gmail.com>
- Cc: SDW WG Public List <public-sdw-wg@w3.org>, "Heaven, Rachel E." <reh@bgs.ac.uk>
- Message-ID: <CAFVDz418dFAg63-uTKBteqtb0d-K3jYB+bSdSOzU24_aeWdhfQ@mail.gmail.com>
Hello, Would it be possible to explain the purpose of this question? There are different ways to interpret the question. What kind of answer is expected and what would be do with the answer? Regards, Frans 2015-09-29 15:18 GMT+02:00 Heaven, Rachel E. <reh@bgs.ac.uk>: > Hi Jeremy > > (Iām taking this to mean how are places conceptually associated with each > other?) > > In addition to spatial-temporal relationships that you could compute from > the (2D) geometries: > > > > Administrative/cultural relationships between places e.g capitals > > Source data geometry link to interpolated/interpreted line/area/volume > > Connectivity relationships ā network distance, connectedness, line of > sight > > Dependency relationship where the geometry of one object defines part of > another e.g. hydrographic features used to define administrative boundaries > > Topological relations in 3rd dimension ā e.g. pipeline is below a road, > flightpath is over a city. i.e. geometries are disjoint but they overlap in > the horizontal plane. > > > > Rachel > > > > *From:* Jeremy Tandy [mailto:jeremy.tandy@gmail.com] > *Sent:* 24 September 2015 09:29 > *To:* SDW WG Public List > *Subject:* [linking-data] Where do links commonly occur (in spatial data)? > > > > Email thread for collecting discussion on the question: "Where do links > commonly occur (in spatial data)?" > > > > The related wiki entry for this questions is here [1] > > > > For instructions about how to engage with this discussion, please see my > previous email [2]. > > > > Many thanks. Jeremy > > > > [1]: > https://www.w3.org/2015/spatial/wiki/Linking_Data#Where_do_links_commonly_occur_.28in_spatial_data.29.3F > > > [2]: https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-sdw-wg/2015Sep/0044.html > ------------------------------ > This message (and any attachments) is for the recipient only. NERC is > subject to the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and the contents of this > email and any reply you make may be disclosed by NERC unless it is exempt > from release under the Act. Any material supplied to NERC may be stored in > an electronic records management system. > ------------------------------ >
Received on Friday, 2 October 2015 14:17:15 UTC