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ANSI INCITS ISO 19148-2012 Geographic information - Linear referencing《地理信息.线性参考》.pdf

1、 INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20122012 (ISO/IEC 19148-2012, IDT) Geographic information Linear referencing Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20122012

2、PDF disclaimer This PDF file may contain embedded typefaces. In accordance with Adobes licensing policy, this file may be printed or viewed but shall not be edited unless the typefaces which are embedded are licensed to and installed on the computer performing the editing. In downloading this file,

3、parties accept therein the responsibility of not infringing Adobes licensing policy. The ISO Central Secretariat accepts no liability in this area. Adobe is a trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated. Details of the software products used to create this PDF file can be found in the General Info relat

4、ive to the file; the PDF-creation parameters were optimized for printing. Every care has been taken to ensure that the file is suitable for use by ISO member bodies. In the unlikely event that a problem relating to it is found, please inform the Central Secretariat at the address given below. Adopte

5、d by INCITS (InterNational Committee for Information Technology Standards) as an American National Standard. Date of ANSI Approval: 6/15/2012 Published by American National Standards Institute, 25 West 43rd Street, New York, New York 10036 Copyright 2012 by Information Technology Industry Council (I

6、TI). All rights reserved. These materials are subject to copyright claims of International Standardization Organization (ISO), International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), American National Standards Institute (ANSI), and Information Technology Industry Council (ITI). Not for resale. No part of

7、this publication may be reproduced in any form, including an electronic retrieval system, without the prior written permission of ITI. All requests pertaining to this standard should be submitted to ITI, 1250 Eye Street NW, Washington, DC 20005. Printed in the United States of America ii ITIC 2012 A

8、ll rights reserved Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20122012 ITIC 2012 All rights reserved iiiContents Page 1 Scope1 2 Conformance .1 3 Norma

9、tive references3 4 Terms and definitions .3 5 Abbreviated terms.6 6 Linear referencing .6 Annex A (normative) Abstract test suite 52 Annex B (informative) Generalized model for linear referencing.56 Annex C (informative) Commonly used linear referencing methods and models .59 Annex D (informative) E

10、vent and segmentation examples.79 Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20122012 iv ITIC 2012 All rights reservedForeword ISO (the International O

11、rganization for Standardization) is a worldwide federation of national standards bodies (ISO member bodies). The work of preparing International Standards is normally carried out through ISO technical committees. Each member body interested in a subject for which a technical committee has been estab

12、lished has the right to be represented on that committee. International organizations, governmental and non-governmental, in liaison with ISO, also take part in the work. ISO collaborates closely with the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) on all matters of electrotechnical standardizat

13、ion. International Standards are drafted in accordance with the rules given in the ISO/IEC Directives, Part 2. The main task of technical committees is to prepare International Standards. Draft International Standards adopted by the technical committees are circulated to the member bodies for voting

14、. Publication as an International Standard requires approval by at least 75 % of the member bodies casting a vote. Attention is drawn to the possibility that some of the elements of this document may be the subject of patent rights. ISO shall not be held responsible for identifying any or all such p

15、atent rights. ISO 19148 was prepared by Technical Committee ISO/TC 211, Geographic information/Geomatics. Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20

16、122012 ITIC 2012 All rights reserved vIntroduction This International Standard is a description of the data and operations required to support linear referencing. This includes Linear Referencing Systems, linearly located events and linear segments. Linear Referencing Systems enable the specificatio

17、n of positions along linear objects. The approach is based upon the Generalized Model for Linear Referencing3first standardized within ISO 19133:2005, 6.6. This International Standard extends that which was included in ISO 19133, both in functionality and explanation. ISO 19109 supports features rep

18、resenting discrete objects with attributes having values which apply to the entire feature. ISO 19123 allows the attribute value to vary, depending upon the location within a feature, but does not support the assignment of attribute values to a single point or length along a linear feature. Linearly

19、 located events provide the mechanism for specifying attribution of linear objects when the attribute value varies along the length of a linear feature. A Linear Referencing System is used to specify where along the linear object each attribute value applies. The same mechanism can be used to specif

20、y where along a linear object another object is located, such as guardrail or a traffic accident. It is common practice to segment a linear object having linearly located events, based upon one or more of its attributes. The resultant linear segments are attributed with just the attributes used in t

21、he segmentation process, insuring that the linear segments are homogeneous in value for these segmenting attributes. This International Standard differs from ISO 19133:2005, 6.6 in the following areas. a) All occurrences of Linear Reference Method and Linear Reference System have been changed to Lin

22、ear Referencing Method and Linear Referencing System, respectively. b) LR_Element has been renamed LR_LinearElement and further defined as being a feature or geometry or topology. These shall support the newly introduced interface ILinearElement, meaning that it is possible to measure (linearly) alo

23、ng them. c) The newly introduced ILinearElement interface includes operations for returning the default Linear Referencing Method of the linear element and any of its length or weight attribute values. It also includes operations for translating between Linear Referencing Methods and/or linear eleme

24、nts. d) The types of Linear Referencing Methods have been formalized as a CodeList. Names of common Linear Referencing Methods have been added as an informative annex. e) An additional attribute, constraint0*, has been added to Linear Referencing Method to specify the constraints imposed by the meth

25、od, such as “only allows reference marker referents”. This is an alternative to subtyping the methods that would force a too-structured approach, inconsistent with the Generalized Model, and would be indeterminate due to the wide variety of Linear Referencing Methods currently in use. f) The Linear

26、Referencing Method “project” operation has been renamed “lrPosition” and moved to the ISpatial interface and a second, opposite, operation “point” has been added. Only LR_Curves realize this interface since their spatial representation is requisite for the two operations, along with the ILinearEleme

27、nt interface. g) The LR_PositionExpression measure attribute has been extracted out into a Distance Expression along with the optional referent and offset roles consistent with the original theoretical model. This allows for specifying only an LR_DistanceExpression when the LR_LinearElement and LR_L

28、inearReferencingMethod are already known. h) Reference Marker has been generalized to LR_Referent to enable support for other referent types such as intersections, boundaries and landmarks. This type has been formalized as a CodeList. Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS u

29、nder license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20122012 vi ITIC 2012 All rights reservedi) A second, optional (towards) Referent has been added in a new (optional) package, Linear Referencing Towards Referent (LRTR), for

30、 those Linear Referencing Methods which allow this to disambiguate measurement direction. j) Lateral Offsets have been moved to a new (optional) package, Linear Referencing Offset (LRO). Horizontal, vertical, and combined horizontal and vertical offsets are now supported. Offset referent has been ge

31、neralized to allow for feature instances as well as character strings. k) Vector Offsets have been adopted from ISO 19141. They exist in a new (optional) package, Linear Referencing Offset Vector (LROV). An optional offset vector Coordinate Reference System (CRS) can be provided if it is different f

32、rom the CRS of the linear element. l) The theoretical model on which the original standard was built is explained in Annex B. m) More descriptive text is added throughout this International Standard to explain the concepts being presented. n) Minor changes to some class, attribute and role names hav

33、e been made. o) A new (optional) package, Linearly Located Event (LE) has been added which uses linearly referenced positions to specify where along a linear feature a particular attribute value or other feature instance applies. p) A new (optional) package, Linear Segmentation (LS) has been added t

34、o support the generation of homogeneous attributed linear segments from linear features with length-varying attribution. q) Absolute Linear Referencing Method with non-zero linear element start is now accommodated. r) lateralOffsetReferentType and verticalOffsetReferentType have been changed from Co

35、deLists to Character Strings. Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permitted without license from IHS-,-,-AMERICAN NATIONAL STANDARD INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20122012 ITIC 2012 All rights reserved 1Geographic

36、information Linear referencing 1 Scope This International Standard specifies a conceptual schema for locations relative to a one-dimensional object as measurement along (and optionally offset from) that object. It defines a description of the data and operations required to use and support linear re

37、ferencing. This International Standard is applicable to transportation, utilities, location-based services and other applications which define locations relative to linear objects. 2 Conformance 2.1 Conformance overview Clause 6 of this International Standard uses the Unified Modelling Language (UML

38、) to present conceptual schemas for describing the constructs required for Linear Referencing. These schemas define conceptual classes that shall be used in application schemas, profiles and implementation specifications. This International Standard concerns only externally visible interfaces and pl

39、aces no restriction on the underlying implementations other than what is required to satisfy the interface specifications in the actual situation, such as interfaces to software services using techniques such as SOAP; interfaces to databases using techniques such as SQL; data interchange using encod

40、ing as defined in ISO 19118. Few applications require the full range of capabilities described by this conceptual schema. Clause 6, therefore, defines a set of conformance classes that support applications whose requirements range from the minimum necessary to define data structures to full object i

41、mplementation. This flexibility is controlled by a set of UML types that can be implemented in a variety of manners. Implementations that define full object functionality shall implement all operations defined by the types of the chosen conformance class, as is common for UML designed object impleme

42、ntations. It is not necessary for implementations that choose to depend on external “free functions” for some or all operations, or forgo them altogether, to support all operations, but they shall always support a data type sufficient to record the state of each of the chosen UML types as defined by

43、 its member variables. It is acceptable to use common names for concepts that are the same but have technically different implementations. The UML model in this International Standard defines abstract types, application schemas define conceptual classes, various software systems define implementatio

44、n classes or data structures, and the XML from the encoding standard (ISO 19118) defines entity tags. All of these reference the same information content. There is no difficulty in allowing the use of the same name to represent the same information content even though at a deeper level there are sig

45、nificant technical differences in the digital entities being implemented. This “allows” types defined in the UML model to be used directly in application schemas. Copyright American National Standards Institute Provided by IHS under license with ANSI Not for ResaleNo reproduction or networking permi

46、tted without license from IHS-,-,-INCITS/ISO/IEC 19148-20122012 2 ITIC 2012 All rights reserved2.2 Conformance classes 2.2.1 General Conformance to this International Standard shall consist of either data type conformance or both data type and operation conformance. 2.2.2 Data type conformance Data

47、type conformance includes the usage of data types in application schemas or profiles that instantiate types in this International Standard. In this context, “instantiate” means that there is a correspondence between the types in the appropriate part of this International Standard, and the data types

48、 of the application schema or profile in such a way that each standard type can be considered as a supertype of the application schema data type. This means that an application schema or profile data type corresponding to a standard type contains sufficient data to recreate that standard types information content. Table 1 assigns conformance tests to each of the packages in Clause 6. Each row in the table represents one conformance class. A specification claiming data type conformance to a package in the first column of the table shall sa

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