Class Name: Union of Features

Superclass - Aggregate Feature

Definition

An Aggregate Feature containing an arbitrary collection of Features.

Primary Page in DRM Diagram:

Example

  1. A collection of Areal Features that represent all of the forested areas within the spatial extent of the Transmittal Root.

FAQs

What is the purpose of this class?
A Union of Features provides a general-purpose mechanism for grouping together a collection of Features, which may include Primitive Features, Feature Model Instances, and other Aggregate Features. Note that a Union of Features is the only type of Aggregate Feature that can include Primitive Features as direct components. They therefore tend to be used at the lowest levels of a Feature Hierarchy.

Constraints

Associated by (one-way)(inherited)

Associated with (two-way)(inherited)

Composed of (one-way)(inherited)

Composed of (two-way)(inherited)

Composed of (two-way)

Composed of (one-way metadata)(inherited)

Component of (two-way)(inherited)

Inherited Field Elements

SE_FEATURE_TOPOLOGY_LEVEL_ENUM feature_topology_level;
SE_BOOLEAN unique_descendants; (notes)
SE_BOOLEAN independent_topologies; (notes)
SE_BOOLEAN strict_organizing_principle; (notes)

Field Elements

SE_UNION_TYPE_ENUM union_type;
SE_ORDERED_UNION_TYPE_ENUM reason_for_ordering;

Notes

Composed of Notes

Image_Mapping_Function

 Added to support "attributes for derived objects."
 That is, these components are used only to specify
 texture mapping information for geometry that
 is derived from the <Feature> by the consumer.
 These <Image Mapping Functions> must use
 <Image Anchor> components to specify the mapping.

Fields Notes

unique_descendants

 If true, then for any object that exists 'below' this aggregation,
 each object will appear in only one 'branch' of this aggregation.
 If false, then objects may appear in multiple 'branches' of this
 aggregation.

independent_topologies

 If true, then each 'branch' from this aggregation is its own,
 independent topology.  If false, then all of the branches exist
 within the same topology.

strict_organizing_principle

 If true, then each 'branch' strictly follows the rules of this
 aggregation.  If false, then each 'branch' might bend the rules a bit.
 For example, if this is a spatial aggregation, than a value of true
 indicates that objects will *not* cross the spatial extents defined
 by this aggregation relationship, and a value of false indicates
 that objects might cross those bounds.  For another example, if this
 is a time-based aggregation, then a value of true indicates that all
 branches will only contain data valid for the times specified for
 each branch, and a value of false indicates that the branches have
 the option of including data that falls outside of the specified
 time ranges for that branch.

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