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“Feature” vs “geographic feature” #626
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Is 57f0895 better? |
Yes, thanks. |
Hmmm. Channeling Ron Lake. The discussion as to whether the concept "feature" is geographic or not goes back two decades to when the WFS Standard was in development. Ron - and many others such as John Herring and myself - stated that a feature does not have to have location and/or geometry. A feature is a real world phenomenon and can be defined by a set of attributes with no location content. An interesting conundrum when working in a geospatial context :-) Anyway, this is why a GML Feature may not have an associated geometry- just attributes (or properties as Ron and others termed these). So, I am not sure if we need to define a geographic feature and a non-geographic feature. A feature either has a geometry or not. Much simpler. |
includes: - cleaning up diagrams for geopackage#622 - fixing figures in conventions - definition updates from opengeospatial#626
includes: - cleaning up diagrams for geopackage#622 - fixing figures in conventions - definition updates from opengeospatial#626
includes: - cleaning up diagrams for geopackage#622 - fixing figures in conventions - definition updates from #626
Comment in response to https://www.ogc.org/standards/requests/246:
The document uses the term “feature” for what is usually called “geographic feature” – feature associated with a location relative to the Earth – in ISO and OGC documents (see e.g. the OGC abstract specifications).
That leads to the inventing of the term “attributes set” in 7.4, with the note that “OGC 12-128 defined this concept as “attributes”. However, this conflicts with the standard definition of an attribute as a member of a class.”.
Wouldn't it be more in line with existing OGC and ISO documents to use the terms already established in the conceptual and logical model?
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