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ODM FTF 2 — All Issues

  • Key: ODMF2
  • Issues Count: 30
Open Closed All
All Issues

Issues Summary

Key Issue Reported Fixed Disposition Status
ODMF2-30 Design of RDF metamodel for rdf:Statement, triple, and graph controversial ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-29 The RDF/S and XML Schema library has some metalevel mixups ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-26 UML Thing 1 ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-25 Concretely represented ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-24 M0 implementation of a class ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-28 Page 188 formatting ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-27 Table 16.6 ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-22 Modeled instances ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-21 Extents. In Section 16.2.2 ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-20 Class = set of instances ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-23 Table 16.5 ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-18 Chapter 16 purpose ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-17 Section 8.2 wording ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-16 RestrictionClass constraint [1]. ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-15 Annex A missing model library ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-19 Classes and properties wording ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-14 UML References ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-9 Herbrand semantics ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-8 Constants ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-13 Symmetric ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-7 Restriction. ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-6 N-aries ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-12 Behavioral Features ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-11 All/SomeValuesFrom ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-10 Transitive closure ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-5 Name as instance ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-4 Classes and properties ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-3 Metalevels ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed
ODMF2-1 Annex D.2, OWL Full ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Closed; No Change closed
ODMF2-2 Annex D.4 typo ODM 1.0b2 ODM 1.0 Resolved closed

Issues Descriptions

Design of RDF metamodel for rdf:Statement, triple, and graph controversial

  • Key: ODMF2-30
  • Legacy Issue Number: 12793
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Evan K. Wallace)
  • Summary:

    Design of RDF metamodel for rdf:Statement, triple, and graph controversial in semantic web community. In November-December 2007, there were discussions of the ODM metamodels for RDF and OWL
    within the OWL working group of the W3C. It became clear from these discussions that key OWL
    and RDF experts were surprised and not particularly happy with how ODM modeled the RDF data
    model and reification vocabulary. These portions of the RDF specification describe the fundamental
    data model for RDF assertions: Triple with subject, predicate and object properties; Graphs for
    collecting triples as sets of assertions; and a reification vocabulary enabling assertions about triples
    themselves. Pragmatic design decisions were made for the ODM metamodel which merged support
    for triples and the reification vocabulary into a single class, Statement, and merged support for a
    non-standard extension for RDF, named graphs, with graph.
    Unfortunately, the reification vocabulary
    for RDF has proved problematic and controversial, and because these aspects are key to the semantics
    of RDF, some are very sensitive about how they are modeled.
    To encourage better acceptance of ODM in the semantic web community the RDF metamodel should
    be changed to correspond with expectations of SemWeb experts. Triples, Statements, Graphs and
    Named Graphs should all be modeled with separate constructs with non-normative and non-standard
    elements noted. The OWL Ontology model which uses these constructs should be modified to use the
    fundamental rdf forms: triple and graph, and should do this in a way consistent with the RDF
    specifications, e.g., RDF triples in a graph are considered unordered (a set).

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Thu, 21 Aug 2008 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Factor the Statements diagram in Figure 10.2 in RDFBase into 3 diagrams: Graph Data Model, Reification, and Graphs. This separates rdf triples from statements about them and creates a separate construct for Named Graph since it is not a part of the current rdf specification. The diagram for rdf:statements is now called Reification (rdfs calls this the reification vocabulary), the Graph Data Model diagram depicts triples, and the Graphs diagram depicts RDF graphs and named graphs. New subsections in RDFBase will be added for RDF Reification and Graphs: Reification after the Literals section and Graphs after Reification.
    Places in odm metamodels which extended or otherwise referred to statements are changed to refer to triples. This includes the Documents model in the RDFWeb package and the Ontology model in OWLBase.
    Changes include:
    § Changing section 10.2 from describing RDF Statements to describing Triples.
    § Revising figure 10.2 to describe triples, moving RDF Graph to 10.5, eliminating Reification kind, and introducing a supertype which is a complete and disjoint covering for URIReferenceNode, BlankNode, and RDFLiteral called Node for RDFSubject and RDFObject roles from Triple.
    § Adding a new section 10.4 called RDF Statements to describe the RDF reification vocabulary. Including a diagram describing Statements and its relationship to Triples.
    § Adding a new section 10.5 called Graphs describing rdf graphs and named triples. This includes a Graphs diagram depicting RDF Graphs and Named Graphs as separate classes and including associations on named graphs to for equivalentGraphs and subGraphs per the seminal named graphs reference.
    § Revising Documents and Namespaces in the RDFWeb package to refer to triples instead of statements and revising the Documents diagram accordingly.
    § Revising OWL Ontology section and diagram in the OWLBase package to refer to triples instead of statements and to eliminate

    {ordered}

    attribute for sets of triples.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:56 GMT

The RDF/S and XML Schema library has some metalevel mixups

  • Key: ODMF2-29
  • Legacy Issue Number: 11304
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    The RDF/S and XML Schema library has some metalevel mixups I think, see
    comments. Can discuss, should be easy to fix.b

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Mon, 27 Aug 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace Annex A, in its entirety with the attached PDF revision. Revisions include:
    § Revised Table 30 to correct meta-level concerns raised in issue 11304
    § New Table 31 to provide library for RDF profile for XML Schema Datatypes
    § New Table 32 representing the missing model library for the OWL profile noted in issue 10840

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:56 GMT

UML Thing 1

  • Key: ODMF2-26
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10861
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    UML Thing 1. In 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), second paragraph, starting at "The main difference" overstates the difference. The ODM defines a UML model library that includes Thing, which is not "unusual" or "problematic" in any way. The most that can be fairly said is that UML does not currently standardize its own model library.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Remove the text about this being problematic in UML.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Concretely represented

  • Key: ODMF2-25
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10860
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Concretely represented. In Section 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), second paragraph under Figure 16.5, says OWL instances are "concretely represented". What does this mean?

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Change the text to use less ambiguous wording.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

M0 implementation of a class

  • Key: ODMF2-24
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10858
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    M0 implementation of a class. In Section 16.2.1 (Class and Property - Basics), paragraph underneath Table 16.5, the first sentence refers to M0 as an implementation, but in these examples, they are only models of instances, not implementations on a particular platform.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace the word implementation with representation.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Page 188 formatting

  • Key: ODMF2-28
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10868
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Page 188 formatting. In 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), the last few paragraphs on page 188 should be one paragraph.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Change the formatting of the text near the bottom of page 188 which begins "The translation from UML to OWL is straightforward" to the end of the page to make this clearly all one paragraph.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Table 16.6

  • Key: ODMF2-27
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10862
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Table 16.6. In 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), Table 16.6 (Simple Model Classes Translated to OWL), since the OWL column does not include properties, the owned attribute column can be removed. Or an OWL properties column can be added. It's confusing to have one and not the other.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Remove column with heading "Owned attributes" from Table 16.6 since the OWL analog to these attributes were not shown in this table. Note that the UML Owned attributes to owl:Property mapping for these classes is shown in table 16.7 on the next page of the document.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Modeled instances

  • Key: ODMF2-22
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10856
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Modeled instances. In Section 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), second paragraph, parentheical remark, insert "not" before "equivalent". because multiple M0 instances can conform to a single M1 instance specification. It would be good to expand this to say that for the purposes of discussion, instance specification used to explain M0 instances, for example, using the term "slot".

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Fix the text to correct the statement about instances in a model library.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Extents. In Section 16.2.2

  • Key: ODMF2-21
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10855
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Extents. In Section 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), second paragraph, first sentence, the extent is not an M0 object. I think this is trying to say the extent consists of M0 objects.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Fix the text to say that the extent consists of M0 objects.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Class = set of instances

  • Key: ODMF2-20
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10854
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Class = set of instances. In Section 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), first paragraph, second sentence, an OWL class can exist without insances, so it is not equivalent to a set of instances.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    The statement was meant to include the empty set. The sentence was slightly revised to make this clearer.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Table 16.5

  • Key: ODMF2-23
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10857
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Table 16.5. Table 16.5 (Example Course Instance) has a column "title", which I assume should be "description" to be consistent with the example in the previous section.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Fix the table to match the model specified in the earlier section.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Chapter 16 purpose

  • Key: ODMF2-18
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10847
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Chapter 16 purpose. In Chapter 16 (Mapping UML to OWL), first sentence, starting with "in part" says the chapter is trying to justify using ODM rather than UML. This of course is not the point of a comparison, which is to be informative and let readers make their own choices, including the option to use both with mappings.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace the entire first sentence of 16.1 Introduction as described below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Section 8.2 wording

  • Key: ODMF2-17
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10842
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Section 8.2 wording. In Section 8.2 (Why Not Simply Use or Extend the UML 2.0 Metamodel?), next to last paragraph, first sentence, remove "Additionally". The paragraph is about a similarity between UML and OWL, rather than a difference as the earlier paragraphs were.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as indicated.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

RestrictionClass constraint [1].

  • Key: ODMF2-16
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10841
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    RestrictionClass constraint [1]. In 14.2.5.3 RestrictionClass, Constraints. [1], the last word should be "restriction" rather than "constraint".

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as indicated.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Annex A missing model library

  • Key: ODMF2-15
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10840
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Annex A missing model library. Appendix A is missing the UML Profile for OWL that the first paragraph of Appendix A sayss it contains. Last sentence refers to "Table xx+1"

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace Annex A, in its entirety with the attached PDF revision. Revisions include:
    § Revised Table 30 to correct meta-level concerns raised in issue 11304
    § New Table 31 to provide library for RDF profile for XML Schema Datatypes
    § New Table 32 representing the missing model library for the OWL profile noted in issue 10840

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

Classes and properties wording

  • Key: ODMF2-19
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10852
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Classes and properties wording. In Section 16.2.1 (UML Kernel), Under Figure 16.1, sixth bullet, the sentence combines optional and mandatory multiplcity (may or may not, one or more). Properties may be optionally owned by a single class, elements cannot be owned by more than one other element

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Author agreed with the issue. A replacement sentence was drafted leading to the fix below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 22:55 GMT

UML References


Herbrand semantics

  • Key: ODMF2-9
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10881
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Herbrand semantics. In 16.2.3 (More Advanced Concepts), under the XML example, the paragraph starting "In UML, there is a strict separation" is incorrect. The M0 level of UML can be real world individuals, not just software implementations (this is called an "analysis" application). Even when they are software implementations, they do not need to be specific ones, such as an SQL database manager. The last sentence is fine because of the qualification. The previous ones makes it seem like the qualification is always the case. The entrie next paragraph seems to also to mit the qualification, and I think can be dropped, since the presence of particular kinds of nulls in databases not relate to UML as generally applied. The last sentence of that paragraph can be used as a summary of the discussion.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as described below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Constants

  • Key: ODMF2-8
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10880
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Constants. In 16.2.3 (More Advanced Concepts), under the XML example, paragraph starting "It is not required", the same is true in UML.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace and append text as described below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Symmetric

  • Key: ODMF2-13
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10903
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Symmetric. Section 16.3.5 (Binary Association To Object Property), second paragraph says that binary associations with the same type on both ends translate to symmetric properties in OWL. This isn't correct. For example, an association that has Animal on both ends, with ends named "chases" and "chased by", doesn't mean that if animal A chases animal B, that animal B chases animal A. It means that animal B is chased by animal A

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as described below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Restriction.

  • Key: ODMF2-7
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10878
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Restriction. In 16.2.3 (More Advanced Concepts), eigth paragraph, first sentence should clarify that the restriction is recorded in the domain in the XML format, but is a restriction on the range. In particular, "relation" should be expanded to clarify that the resriction applies to each domain individual, not the relation as a whole (ie, not all tuples).

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Edit the text in the ninth paragraph of section 16.2.3 as described below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

N-aries

  • Key: ODMF2-6
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10869
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    N-aries. In 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), second paragraph under Figure 16.3, association classes are not the same as naries. The translation given to N-ary associations is incomplete, because n-ary associations have multiplicities. These will not translate to cardinalities of binaries, at least not without a constraint to ensure there is only one instances of the association class in OWL for each link in UML.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as described below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Behavioral Features

  • Key: ODMF2-12
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10896
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Behavioral Features. In Secton 16.6.1 (Behavioral Features), first paragraph is about a number of things other than behavioral features, and much of it is incorrect or uses incorrect terminology. Behavioral features only declare capabilities or services, not resources. They aren't the "program" that implements the service (called Behavior in UML). Behavioral features can be used in OCL that defines a derivation of a property, but the behavioral feature isn't directly related to the derived property. Operations include the parameters (including return value). A "method" in UML is the behavior that implements the operation on a particular class. Responsibility in UML is only a standard stereotype of a usage dependency. It isn't a well-developed part of UML class modeling. Qualified associations are more accurately described as a special kind of ternary relation. An abstract can have operations and methods like any other class. Abstract classes cannot have direct instances. Interfaces specify features of classes, including operation features. They aren't interfaces of operations themselves.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as described below

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

All/SomeValuesFrom

  • Key: ODMF2-11
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10883
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    All/SomeValuesFrom. In 16.2.3 (More Advanced Concepts), under the XML example, the paragraph starting "An OWL property can have", the translation to UML for allValuesFrom restrictions is property subsetting. There is no translation for someValuesFrom unless using the UML Profile for OWL.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as described below

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Transitive closure

  • Key: ODMF2-10
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10882
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Transitive closure. In 16.2.3 (More Advanced Concepts), under the XML example, the paragraph starting "Note that a consequence of", seems to have lost its context. It doesn't appear related to the paragraphs around it. If it is, this should be clarified.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace and append text as described below.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Name as instance

  • Key: ODMF2-5
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10859
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Name as instance. In Section 16.2.2 (Class and Property - Basics), paragraph underneath Table 16.5, the second sentence says a name can be an instance, but a name is usually a property or a string, not an instance. The third sentence says if name is the identifer, then "the remainder of the slots could be filled dynamically from other properties of the class". What does dynamically mean? It appears this is going into relational modeling, like the previous section does.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Delete paragraph underneath table 16.5.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Classes and properties

  • Key: ODMF2-4
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10851
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Classes and properties. In Section 16.2.1 (UML Kernel), Under Figure 16.1, fifth bullet, properties do not implement classes (the "implementation" usually refers to how the model is translated to a platform). UML properties have the same semantics as OWL properties. Classes do not necessarily have properties. See multiplicity from Class to Property in the UML spec.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as described below

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Metalevels

  • Key: ODMF2-3
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10848
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Metalevels. In Chapter 16 (Mapping UML to OWL), third paragraph, first sentence, before the bullets, should refer to "models", rather than UML models. It can also refer the reader to more examples and explanation in Sections 7.9 through 7.12 of [UML Infrastructure, http://doc.omg.org/formal/07-02-06

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as described below

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Annex D.2, OWL Full

  • Key: ODMF2-1
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10843
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Annex D.2, OWL Full. In Annex D.2, under Figure D1, the second sentence says that OWL Full must be used to subclass OWL class. Why can't OWL class be subclasses in OWL Lite or DL? All instances of subclasses of OWL:Class are also OWL classes, and presumably wouldn't violate the constraints of OWL Lite or DL just because of the subclassing.

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Closed; No Change — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    No Data Available

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT

Annex D.4 typo

  • Key: ODMF2-2
  • Legacy Issue Number: 10845
  • Status: closed  
  • Source: NIST ( Mr. Conrad Bock)
  • Summary:

    Annex D.4 typo. Annex D.4, second sentence, "OntoClear" should be "OntoClean".

  • Reported: ODM 1.0b2 — Fri, 30 Mar 2007 04:00 GMT
  • Disposition: Resolved — ODM 1.0
  • Disposition Summary:

    Replace text as requested.

  • Updated: Fri, 6 Mar 2015 20:58 GMT