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Key: SBVR11-129
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Legacy Issue Number: 16309
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Status: closed
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Source: Google ( Don Baisley)
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Summary:
Clarify that objectifications based on a fact type can refer not only to actualities, but more generally to states of affairs, regardless of whether they are actual. Fix examples of objectifications to include objectifications of states of affairs that are not necessarily actual. Also, for SBVR Structured English in the explanation of using the demonstrative “that” for objectification, refer more generally to “state of affairs” rather than to “actuality”.
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Reported: SBVR 1.0 — Fri, 3 Jun 2011 04:00 GMT
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Disposition: Resolved — SBVR 1.1
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Disposition Summary:
Clarify that objectifications based on a fact type can refer not only to actualities, but more generally to states of affairs, regardless of whether they are actual. Fix examples of objectifications to include objectifications of states of affairs that are not necessarily actual. Also, for SBVR Structured English in the explanation of using the demonstrative “that” for objectification, refer more generally to “state of affairs” rather than to “actuality”.
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Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT