1、raising standards worldwide NO COPYING WITHOUT BSI PERMISSION EXCEPT AS PERMITTED BY COPYRIGHT LAW BSI Standards Publication BS ISO/IEC 15944-10:2013 Information technology Business Operational View Part 10: IT-enabled coded domains as semantic components in business transactionsBS ISO/IEC 15944-10:
2、2013 BRITISH STANDARD National foreword This British Standard is the UK implementation of ISO/IEC 15944-10:2013. The UK participation in its preparation was entrusted to Technical Committee IST/40, Data management and interchange. A list of organizations represented on this committee can be obtained
3、 on request to its secretary. This publication does not purport to include all the necessary provisions of a contract. Users are responsible for its correct application. The British Standards Institution 2013. Published by BSI Standards Limited 2013 ISBN 978 0 580 71538 9 ICS 35.240.60 Compliance wi
4、th a British Standard cannot confer immunity from legal obligations. This British Standard was published under the authority of the Standards Policy and Strategy Committee on 28 February 2013. Amendments issued since publication Date T e x t a f f e c t e dBS ISO/IEC 15944-10:2013Reference number IS
5、O/IEC 15944-10:2013(E) ISO/IEC 2013INTERNATIONAL STANDARD ISO/IEC 15944-10 First edition 2013-02-15 Information technology Business Operational View Part 10: IT-enabled coded domains as semantic components in business transactions Technologies de linformation Vue oprationnelle daffaires Partie 10: D
6、omaines cods activs comme composantes smantiques dans les transactions daffaires BS ISO/IEC 15944-10:2013 ISO/IEC 15944-10:2013(E) COPYRIGHT PROTECTED DOCUMENT ISO/IEC 2013 All rights reserved. Unless otherwise specified, no part of this publication may be reproduced or utilized otherwise in any for
7、m or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, or posting on the internet or an intranet, without prior written permission. Permission can be requested from either ISO at the address below or ISOs member body in the country of the requester. ISO copyright office Case postale 56
8、 CH-1211 Geneva 20 Tel. + 41 22 749 01 11 Fax + 41 22 749 09 47 E-mail copyrightiso.org Web www.iso.org Published in Switzerland ii ISO/IEC 2013 All rights reservedBS ISO/IEC 15944-10:2013 ISO/IEC 15944-10:2013(E) ISO/IEC 2013 All rights reserved iiiContents Page Foreword vi 0 Introduction vii 0.1 O
9、verview of purpose and nature of coded domains . vii 0.2 Benefits of the use of coded domains . viii 0.3 Identification, mapping and IT-enablement of existing standards for widely-used code sets. ix 0.4 Link to fundamental components in Business Transaction Model (BTM) . xi 0.5 IT-enabled and conten
10、t predefined Semantic Components . xii 0.6 Coded domains as reusable business objects . xiii 0.7 Use of “Person“, “organization“ and “party“ in the context of business transaction and commitment exchange. xiv 0.8 Importance and role of terms and definitions xv 0.9 Use of “identifier“ as “identifier
11、(in business transaction)“ to prevent ambiguity xvi 0.10 Organization and description of document xvii 1 Scope 1 1.1 Statement of Scope . 1 1.2 Exclusions 2 1.3 Aspects currently not yet addressed 2 1.3.1 Addressing “Quadrant B, C b) ensure as high a degree of data integrity of the semantics of the
12、data interchanged; c) maximize an IT-enabled approach; d) maximize granularity and flexibility Given the fact that in Open-edi there are many differing internal and external constraints as well as the wide variety of applications and sectors, it is important that the recorded information interchange
13、d among the parties concerned be as “granular” and precise as possible. Here “coded domains” serve as flexible “lego blocks” from which data values can be retrieved and used as unambiguous semantic components. The concept of “coded domain” is unique in the context of an Open-edi approach and has bee
14、n defined in an ISO/IEC 15944 context. This concept and its definition represents an approach, methodology and tool which is needed to support appropriate level of unambiguity of (electronic) data interchange needed to support. The concept of “coded domain” covers several perspectives 1 ; 1) busines
15、s and information (modelling) perspective, i.e., those of users and the BOVs; 2) IT modelling perspectives such as: a) entity-relationship modelling where a coded domain is viewed as an entity type functioning as a “domain”; and, b) object-oriented modelling where a coded domain is viewed as an “obj
16、ect class”. 3) an information science (information management, library, records management, etc.) perspective where coded domains are viewed as “schedules”, “authority files”, “tables” (which one at times “attaches” to a concept/term thesauri (or indexing/classification schemes of “instance relationships”; 1For the definition, see entry “D033” and Clause 5.3.2 in ISO/IEC 15944-7:2007.