- From: Little, Chris <chris.little@metoffice.gov.uk>
- Date: Thu, 4 May 2017 16:05:40 +0000
- To: Clemens Portele <portele@interactive-instruments.de>
- CC: Linda van den Brink <l.vandenbrink@geonovum.nl>, "Tandy, Jeremy" <jeremy.tandy@metoffice.gov.uk>, "public-sdw-wg@w3.org" <public-sdw-wg@w3.org>
Clemens, Thanks - I was not paying much attention to that discussion. So, this capture the intent, albeit slightly verbosely: "Spatial thing: Anything with spatial extent (i.e. size, shape, or position) and is a combination of the real-world phenomenon and its abstraction (the feature). Examples are: people, places, bowling balls, as well as abstract regions like polygons or cubes. This is different from the ISO 19107:2003 definition of a Spatial Object which is a geometry or a topology object [[http://www.isotc211.org/TC211_Multi-Lingual_Glossary-2016-06-28_Published.xls|ISO/TC 211 Multi-Lingual Glossary of Terms]]" Chris > -----Original Message----- > From: Clemens Portele [mailto:portele@interactive-instruments.de] > Sent: Thursday, May 04, 2017 4:06 PM > To: Little, Chris > Cc: Linda van den Brink; Tandy, Jeremy; public-sdw-wg@w3.org > Subject: Re: SDW BP Glossary Issue 195: Spatial Thing > > Chris, > > I think your proposal is not what is intended. I do not know who added > the link to the "spatial object" definition in ISO 19107, but a spatial > object in ISO 19107 is not what we call a spatial thing. A spatial > object is a geometry or a topology object. A spatial thing is a > combination of the real-world phenomenon and its abstraction (the > feature). > > Best regards, > Clemens > > > On 4. May 2017, at 16:23, Little, Chris > <chris.little@metoffice.gov.uk> wrote: > > > > 1. Current Entry: > > "Spatial thing: Anything with spatial extent, i.e. size, shape, or > position. e.g. people, places, bowling balls, as well as abstract > regions like cubes. Compare with the ISO definition for Spatial Object. > [ W3C-BASIC-GEO]" > > > > 2. The ISO definition is actually for a 'spatial object'. > > > > URI: http://registry.it.csiro.au/sandbox/iso-tc211/terms/419, or > TC211 > > spreadsheet > > > > "object used for representing a spatial characteristic of a feature" > > > > Defined in ISO 19107:2003 > > > > 3. W3C-BASIC-GEO does not seem to try anything as rash as defining a > spatial thing. > > > > 4. I propose to stick with the ISO definition, and thus probably no > change needed to the 95 occurrences of 'Spatial Thing' in the BP. > > > > Also add an abstract 2D example. > > > > Glossary would read: > > > > "Spatial thing: Anything with spatial extent (i.e. size, shape, or > position) used for representing a spatial characteristic of a feature. > Examples are: people, places, bowling balls, as well as abstract > regions like polygons or cubes.[[http://www.isotc211.org/TC211_Multi- > Lingual_Glossary-2016-06-28_Published.xls|ISO/TC 211 Multi-Lingual > Glossary of Terms]]" > > > > Chris Little > > Co-Chair, OGC Meteorology & Oceanography Domain Working Group > > > > IT Fellow - Operational Infrastructures Met Office FitzRoy Road > > Exeter Devon EX1 3PB United Kingdom > > Tel: +44(0)1392 886278 Fax: +44(0)1392 885681 Mobile: +44(0)7753 > > 880514 > > E-mail: chris.little@metoffice.gov.uk http://www.metoffice.gov.uk > > > > I am normally at work Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday each week > > > > > >
Received on Thursday, 4 May 2017 16:06:16 UTC