----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, July 30, 2002 2:47
PM
Subject: RE: [ubl-lcsc] ISSUE: Nesting
and Containership within Schema
I'll
start...
Excellent paper.
One additional possibility is to have a "rule" regarding the minimum number of
elements that can comprise a container. For instance, in an example from
the paper we can have:
<tax.identifier>
Does it make sense to
have a container with only a single element? I'm not sure, but I just
wanted to bring the issue up. I also know this may be tough to enforce,
since we can have containers that contain all optional
elements.
Regards,
Joe
**************************************************************************
Joseph M. Chiusano
Logistics Management Institute
2000 Corporate Ridge
McLean, VA 22102
Email: jchiusano@lmi.org
Tel:
571.633.7722
**************************************************************************
Okay Library Content Group, time to get to
work. This is an invitation to discuss, keep this thread going to help
us find resolution. Thanks.
ISSUE IS: The
structure of the business documents within the library seems unusually flat
by XML, OO, and database standards.
**********Comments**********************
NDR
Comment: While we're not against the use of sequences, we
suspect that developers may find it more useful to have collections of
elements that are "rolled up" into container elements at an intermediate
level (for example, rows 30-31 for country sub- entities). The classic chunking standard for
human memory is 7 +/- 2, and standard operating procedure for software
developers and database designers is to use this
standard.
We
also note that there's a lot of optionality of elements. For example,
there's nothing required in Address. Are there interoperability
consequences to this?
If the context methodology is sufficient, is it better to
allow optional elements to be made required or better to allow removal of
elements? [Row 22]
Would intermediate containers help this situation at all
(e.g., you can make the container optional and the contents required)? How
is the "sweet spot" determined on this? As another example, we know that
there will be other kinds of things that we want to consider line items, but
each kind will have a different combination/cardinality of contents. We want to have a rule that the
structures have the maximum number of required contents, and where splitting
the structure into multiples will help, it should generally be done.
Example:
Line items contain at least quantity (1), part number (2), and description
(3). In certain stages of the process, they also contain price information
(4), tax information (5), and shipping information (6). So you have really four kinds of
line item: order, invoice, shipping, and catalog. These should be considered different
rows.
Our
comment from the last face to face: We agree. The usage of Optional and Mandatory
elements needs to be revisited on a whole. This needs to be captured in our
methodology.
Arofan has written a containership document that
has not been finished yet. It is
attached.
Tim's methodology paper addresses this also, you
can also use that as reference.
"Artificial Intelligence is no match for
Natural
Stupidity"
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