- From: Jeremy Tandy <jeremy.tandy@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 15 Mar 2017 06:29:24 +0000
- To: Matthew Perry <matthew.perry@oracle.com>, public-sdw-wg@w3.org
- Message-ID: <CADtUq_2VVs27bvh+9a1euGy+b5ubsb7fgo6j-GrspYvS_iZBvQ@mail.gmail.com>
Thanks both. When I add those votes to Linda's initial comment to me, I take that as consensus. Edit made. Will merge a PR shortly. Jeremy On Tue, 14 Mar 2017 at 14:47 Matthew Perry <matthew.perry@oracle.com> wrote: > I agree with Ed. Give strong guidance to use simple features and do not > mention the others to reduce confusion. > > Cheers, > Matt > > On 3/14/2017 10:03 AM, Ed Parsons wrote: > > I tend to agree with 1) stronger guidance on the commonly used "simple" > relationships and given this 2) not mentioning the others... > > Ed > > > On Tue, 14 Mar 2017 at 09:45 Jeremy Tandy <jeremy.tandy@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi- > > BP14 [1] is now updated (and probably too large and unwieldy in its > current form - we plan to discuss refactoring in Delft during the general > BP doc restructuring discussion). > > However, one quick question might be resolvable before Delft. > > In "Possible Approach to Implementation" BP14 talks about the types of > links that might be used. Section "2. Spatial relationships" discusses > topological relationships. It states: > > > [GeoSPARQL] defines three families of topological relationships (simple > features, Egenhofer and RCC8) all of which are based on the DE-9IM > <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DE-9IM> pattern, which specifies the > spatial dimension of the intersections of the interiors, boundaries and > exteriors of two geometric objects that may be 2-dimensional (e.g. area), > 1-dimensional (e.g. linear) or 0-dimensional (e.g. point). > > ... and ... > > > Details of the Simple Features, Egenhofer and RCC8 (Region Connection > Calculus <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Region_connection_calculus>) > topological relations families are provided in [GeoSPARQL] section 7 > Topology Vocabulary Extension. > > BP14 identifies that the simple features relationship family is the most > commonly used. The [exam] questions for you are: > 1/ should we be stronger with the guidance on using simple features > relationships over those from the other families? > 2/ do we even need to mention the other two families? (to my untrained > brain, they're just confusing!) > > Thanks in advance. > > Jeremy > > [1]: http://w3c.github.io/sdw/bp/#entity-level-links > > -- > > > *Ed Parsons *FRGS > Geospatial Technologist, Google > > +44 7825 382263 <+44%207825%20382263> @edparsons > www.edparsons.com > > >
Received on Wednesday, 15 March 2017 06:30:09 UTC