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Subcommittee 3D DATA SETS FOR LIBRARIES

Subcommittee 3D DATA SETS FOR LIBRARIES. Experience report for implementing IEC 61360 – Conventions and guidelines Cape Town, 2005-10-19 3(Cape Town/Dijkstra)4. Addie Dijkstra Secretary, IEC SC3D. Basic contents. IEC 61360 data dictionary at PSC Need for conventions and guidelines

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Subcommittee 3D DATA SETS FOR LIBRARIES

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  1. Subcommittee 3D DATA SETS FOR LIBRARIES

  2. Experience report for implementing IEC 61360 –Conventions and guidelinesCape Town, 2005-10-193(Cape Town/Dijkstra)4 Addie Dijkstra Secretary, IEC SC3D

  3. Basic contents • IEC 61360 data dictionary at PSC • Need for conventions and guidelines • Conventions for definition • Conventions for naming • Conventions for symbol • Some questions to you

  4. IEC 61360 data dictionary at PSC Philips Semiconductors SPIDER program Type of information to be managed: Any product information or knowledge required during any of the stages of the customer’s product/business creation process Current status: Pilot phase – First 700 products defined in the product library based on data dictionary before end 2005

  5. Goals • Capture product parametric information at the source [and only once] • Use resulting content to generate: • Product information web pages and datasheets • Selection guides • Electronic data exchange e.g. RosettaNet PIP 2A10 • …

  6. Datasheet Rapidly growing complexity • Largest datasheet 1996: 125 pages • Largest datasheet 2002: 650 pages with 521 device characteristics! • Percentage of web visitors downloading datasheets: 87% • Estimated cost to re-create all existing datasheets at current rates: EUR XXX,000,000

  7. Dictionary of data element types Dictionary and library information model is based on: • RosettaNet Dictionary Architecture model, compliant with ISO/IEC information model (IEC 61360-2) Dictionary content: • IEC-61360, Philips proprietary and possibly RNTD Dictionary will be used as (a.o.) a mechanism to enforce standards and consistency

  8. Need for conventions and guidelines Which standards apply • Information model • IEC 61360-2 • DET attributes and their definitions • ISO/IEC 11179-3, IEC 61360-1 • Conventions for writing definitions • ISO/IEC 11179-4 • Conventions for writing names • ISO/IEC 11179-5 (includes guidelines for writing naming conventions and an example convention) • Conventions for writing symbols • ISO 31, IEC 60027, 60747, 60748

  9. Conventions for writing definitions ISO/IEC 11179-4 A data definition shall [requirements]: • be stated in the singular • state what the concept is, not only what it is not • be stated as a descriptive phrase or sentence(s) • contain only commonly understood abbreviations • be expressed without embedding definitions of other data or underlying concepts

  10. Conventions for writing definitions ISO/IEC 11179-4 A data definition should [recommendations]: • state the essential meaning of the concept • be precise and unambiguous • be concise • be able to stand alone • be expressed without embedding rationale, functional usage, or procedural information • avoid circular reasoning • use the same terminology and consistent logical structure for related definitions • be appropriate for the type of metadata item being defined

  11. Conventions for writing names ISO/IEC 11179-5 Includes guidelines for writing structured naming conventions: • Semantic rules enable meaning to be conveyed; • Syntactic rules relate components in a consistent, specified order; • Lexical (word form and vocabulary) rules reduce redundancy and increase precision;

  12. Naming convention for DETs A data element type name shall: • be stated in the singular • be written in lower case with the exception of particular abbreviations and acronyms that are commonly written in upper case • contain only commonly understood abbreviations and acronyms * * Managed by a Philips Semiconductors exceptions list for allowed abbreviations and acronyms

  13. Specific DET naming rules Distinguish between type of DET • Mechanical quantitative data element types • start with the concept or object being specified followed by the measured aspect such as: length, height, diameter • Non-quantitative data element types • start with the concept or object being specified followed by a qualifier such as: type, code, name, description • Electrical quantitative data element types

  14. Naming convention for DETs Electrical quantitative data element types • reflect the electrical symbol in words reading in reverse order; • start with the concept or object being specified, followed by the measured quantity such as: voltage, current, capacitance, temperature; • The concept or object is possibly preceded by one or more qualifiers such as: maximum, peak, average, total; • The measured quantity is possibly followed by a non-quantitative condition such as: from junction to lead;

  15. Example REMARK –The allowed non-quantitative conditions are managed in a Philips Semiconductors non-quantitative conditions list. Only those that are approved shall be used.

  16. Conventions for writing symbols A symbol shall: • use a consistent and approved set of characters; • contain only commonly understood abbreviations; • use parentheses “()” to separate adjacent symbol parts that are written in the same case (upper or lower);* • not exceed a length of 17 characters (not including mark-up); * In general, the first part of subscript is not enclosed in parentheses

  17. Conventions for writing symbols A symbol should: • be concise - use the minimum number of letters • use consistent logical structure for related symbols • reflect the words of the data element type name reading in reverse order • derive the first symbol letter from the measured quantity (its basic letter symbol) which relates to the specified unit

  18. Some questions Questions: • What can TC3 apply from what is already defined in 11179-4 for writing definitions? • Could TC3 benefit further from joined conventions on naming and writing symbols? • Could IEC benefit from a document such as a guide on Conventions for naming, definition and symbols stating the basic principles?

  19. Thank you for your attention.

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