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Attribute

Revision as of 15:22, 3 February 2008 by Unnamed Poltroon (Talk) (Open Issues)

Introduction

This page describes the Higgins concept of Attribute.

Definition

  • Defines a property of an I-Node or a Context.
  • Has a URI-valued type that:
  • Has one or more values all of which MUST be unique
  • The types of the values of an Attribute may be:
    • XML-Schema-based literal datatypes (a specific sub-set of the XML Schema literal types)
    • Sub-types of the XML-Schema-based literal datatypes
    • Complex (structured) datatypes
  • The set of values of a single Attribute may be any combination of the value types

Examples

The physical person Entity Bob Smith might be represented as an I-Node in the Context of his employer, the Port Control Authority. This I-Node might have the following types of Attributes (and associated values) in this Context:

  • email-address = bob@portcontrol.gov
  • phone number = {617-555-1234, 617-333-4321}
  • passport information = ...etc.
  • fingerprint data = ...etc.
  • surname = "Smith"

The surname Attribute in the example above might have a type of http://openschemas.org/2006/person/surname. The schema associated with the containing Context provides metadata about this URI.

This same Entity Bob Smith might also be represented as a I-Node in a "customer-to-Clothes-R-Us" Context (this customer's relationship with the Clothes-R-Us merchant. In this Context Bob has these Attributes:

  • platinumCustomer = True
  • preferredColor = "blue"

HOWL


Open Issues

  • At present an Attribute cannot have N>1 values if the values are the same. For example a very odd father might name each of his three kids "frank". Thus the father I-Node cannot have an attribute "names-of-children" whose values are "frank, frank, frank".
  • We need to be able to describe the reality that "real world" context providers must restrict attributes to be "closed"

Kinds of Attributes

See Also

Links

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