Changes for page 13 Structure Mapping

Last modified by Helena on 2025/09/10 11:19

From version 10.3
edited by Helena
on 2025/05/16 09:12
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 10.16
edited by Helena
on 2025/05/16 09:31
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

Page properties
Content
... ... @@ -38,15 +38,14 @@
38 38  
39 39  Different source values can also map to the same target value, for example when deriving regions from country codes.
40 40  
41 -[[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_59eee18f.gif||alt="Shape7" height="1" width="192"]]
41 +(% style="width:674.294px" %)
42 +|(% style="width:284px" %)**Source Component: REF_AREA**|(% style="width:387px" %)**Target Component: REGION**
43 +|(% style="width:284px" %)FR|(% style="width:387px" %)EUR
44 +|(% style="width:284px" %)DE|(% style="width:387px" %)EUR
45 +|(% style="width:284px" %)IT|(% style="width:387px" %)EUR
46 +|(% style="width:284px" %)ES|(% style="width:387px" %)EUR
47 +|(% style="width:284px" %)BE|(% style="width:387px" %)EUR
42 42  
43 -|Source Component: REF_AREA|Target Component: REGION
44 -|FR|EUR
45 -|DE|EUR
46 -|IT|EUR
47 -|ES|EUR
48 -|BE|EUR
49 -
50 50  == 13.3 N-n structure maps ==
51 51  
52 52  N-n (pronounced 'N to N') mappings describe rules where a specified combination of values in multiple source Components map to specified values in one or more target Components. For example, when mapping a partial Series Key from a highly multidimensional cube (like Balance of Payments) to a single 'Indicator' Dimension in a target Data Structure.
... ... @@ -53,51 +53,42 @@
53 53  
54 54  Example:
55 55  
56 -|Rule|Source|Target
57 -|1|(((
55 +(% style="width:760.294px" %)
56 +|(% style="width:58px" %)**Rule**|(% style="width:384px" %)**Source**|(% style="width:313px" %)**Target**
57 +|(% style="width:58px" %)1|(% style="width:384px" %)(((
58 58  If
59 -
60 60  FREQUENCY=A; and ADJUSTMENT=N; and MATURITY=L.
61 -)))|(((
60 +)))|(% style="width:313px" %)(((
62 62  Set
63 -
64 64  INDICATOR=A_N_L
65 65  )))
66 -|2|(((
64 +|(% style="width:58px" %)2|(% style="width:384px" %)(((
67 67  If
68 -
69 69  FREQUENCY=M; and ADJUSTMENT=S_A1; and MATURITY=TY12.
70 -)))|(((
67 +)))|(% style="width:313px" %)(((
71 71  Set
72 -
73 73  INDICATOR=MON_SAX_12
74 74  )))
75 75  
76 76  N-n rules can also set values for multiple source Components.
77 77  
78 -|Rule|Source|Target
79 -|1|(((
74 +(% style="width:757.294px" %)
75 +|(% style="width:62px" %)**Rule**|(% style="width:378px" %)**Source**|(% style="width:312px" %)**Target**
76 +|(% style="width:62px" %)1|(% style="width:378px" %)(((
80 80  If
81 -
82 82  FREQUENCY=A; and ADJUSTMENT=N; and MATURITY=L.
83 -)))|(((
79 +)))|(% style="width:312px" %)(((
84 84  Set
85 -
86 -INDICATOR=A_N_L, STATUS=QXR15,
87 -
81 +INDICATOR=A_N_L,
82 +STATUS=QXR15,
88 88  NOTE="Unadjusted".
89 89  )))
90 -|2|(((
85 +|(% style="width:62px" %)2|(% style="width:378px" %)(((
91 91  If
92 -
93 93  FREQUENCY=M; and ADJUSTMENT=S_A1; and MATURITY=TY12.
94 -)))|(((
88 +)))|(% style="width:312px" %)(((
95 95  Set
96 -
97 -INDICATOR=MON_SAX_12,
98 -
99 -STATUS=MPM12,
100 -
90 +INDICATOR=MON_SAX_12, STATUS=MPM12,
101 101  NOTE="Seasonally Adjusted"
102 102  )))
103 103  
... ... @@ -107,37 +107,26 @@
107 107  
108 108  A simple example mapping a source dataset with a single dimension to one with multiple dimensions is shown below:
109 109  
110 -|Source|Target|Output Series Key
111 -|SERIES_CODE=XMAN_Z_21|(((
100 +(% style="width:819.294px" %)
101 +|(% style="width:240px" %)**Source**|(% style="width:246px" %)**Target**|(% style="width:329px" %)**Output Series Key**
102 +|(% style="width:240px" %)SERIES_CODE=XMAN_Z_21|(% style="width:246px" %)(((
112 112  Dimensions
113 -
114 114  INDICATOR=XM
115 -
116 116  FREQ=A
117 -
118 118  ADJUSTMENT=N
119 -
120 120  Attributes
121 -
122 122  UNIT_MEASURE=_Z
123 -
124 124  COMP_ORG=21
125 -)))|XM:A:N
126 -|SERIES_CODE=XMAN_Z_34|(((
110 +)))|(% style="width:329px" %)XM:A:N
111 +|(% style="width:240px" %)SERIES_CODE=XMAN_Z_34|(% style="width:246px" %)(((
127 127  Dimensions
128 -
129 129  INDICATOR=XM
130 -
131 131  FREQ=A
132 -
133 133  ADJUSTMENT=N
134 -
135 135  Attributes
136 -
137 137  UNIT_MEASURE=_Z
138 -
139 139  COMP_ORG=34
140 -)))|XM:A:N
119 +)))|(% style="width:329px" %)XM:A:N
141 141  
142 142  The above behaviour can be okay if the series XMAN_Z_21 contains observations for different periods of time then the series XMAN_Z_34. If however both series contain observations for the same point in time, the output for this mapping will be two observations with the same series key, for the same period in time.
143 143  
... ... @@ -153,24 +153,26 @@
153 153  
154 154  A Representation Map mapping ISO 2-character to ISO 3-character Codelists would take the following form:
155 155  
156 -|CL_ISO_ALPHA2|CL_ISO_ALPHA3
157 -|AF|AFG
158 -|AL|ALB
159 -|DZ|DZA
160 -|AS|ASM
161 -|AD|AND
162 -|etc…|
135 +(% style="width:763.294px" %)
136 +|(% style="width:252px" %)**CL_ISO_ALPHA2**|(% style="width:508px" %)**CL_ISO_ALPHA3**
137 +|(% style="width:252px" %)AF|(% style="width:508px" %)AFG
138 +|(% style="width:252px" %)AL|(% style="width:508px" %)ALB
139 +|(% style="width:252px" %)DZ|(% style="width:508px" %)DZA
140 +|(% style="width:252px" %)AS|(% style="width:508px" %)ASM
141 +|(% style="width:252px" %)AD|(% style="width:508px" %)AND
142 +|(% style="width:252px" %)etc…|(% style="width:508px" %)
163 163  
164 164  A Representation Map mapping free text country names to an ISO 2-character Codelist could be similarly described:
165 165  
166 -|Text|CL_ISO_ALPHA2
167 -|"Germany"|DE
168 -|"France"|FR
169 -|"United Kingdom"|GB
170 -|"Great Britain"|GB
171 -|"Ireland"|IE
172 -|"Eire"|IE
173 -|etc…|
146 +(% style="width:770.294px" %)
147 +|(% style="width:247px" %)**Text**|(% style="width:520px" %)**CL_ISO_ALPHA2**
148 +|(% style="width:247px" %)"Germany"|(% style="width:520px" %)DE
149 +|(% style="width:247px" %)"France"|(% style="width:520px" %)FR
150 +|(% style="width:247px" %)"United Kingdom"|(% style="width:520px" %)GB
151 +|(% style="width:247px" %)"Great Britain"|(% style="width:520px" %)GB
152 +|(% style="width:247px" %)"Ireland"|(% style="width:520px" %)IE
153 +|(% style="width:247px" %)"Eire"|(% style="width:520px" %)IE
154 +|(% style="width:247px" %)etc…|(% style="width:520px" %)
174 174  
175 175  Valuelists, introduced in SDMX 3.0, are equivalent to Codelists but allow the maintenance of non-SDMX identifiers. Importantly, their IDs do not need to conform to IDType, but as a consequence are not Identifiable.
176 176  
... ... @@ -178,10 +178,11 @@
178 178  
179 179  In common with Codelists, each item in a Valuelist has a multilingual name giving it a human-readable label and an optional description. For example:
180 180  
181 -|Value|Locale|Name
182 -|$|en|United States Dollar
183 -|%|En|Percentage
184 -| |fr|Pourcentage
162 +(% style="width:780.294px" %)
163 +|(% style="width:126px" %)**Value**|(% style="width:153px" %)**Locale**|(% style="width:498px" %)**Name**
164 +|(% style="width:126px" %)$|(% style="width:153px" %)en|(% style="width:498px" %)United States Dollar
165 +|(% style="width:126px" %)%|(% style="width:153px" %)En|(% style="width:498px" %)Percentage
166 +|(% style="width:126px" %) |(% style="width:153px" %)fr|(% style="width:498px" %)Pourcentage
185 185  
186 186  Other characteristics of Representation Maps:
187 187  
... ... @@ -205,30 +205,31 @@
205 205  
206 206  Below is an example set of regular expression rules for a particular component.
207 207  
208 -|Regex|Description|Output
209 -|A|Rule match if input = 'A'|OUT_A
210 -|^[A-G]|Rule match if the input starts with letters A to G|OUT_B
211 -|A~|B|Rule match if input is either 'A' or 'B'|OUT_C
190 +(% style="width:708.294px" %)
191 +|(% style="width:133px" %)**Regex**|(% style="width:377px" %)**Description**|(% style="width:194px" %)**Output**
192 +|(% style="width:133px" %)A|(% style="width:377px" %)Rule match if input = 'A'|(% style="width:194px" %)OUT_A
193 +|(% style="width:133px" %)^[A-G]|(% style="width:377px" %)Rule match if the input starts with letters A to G|(% style="width:194px" %)OUT_B
194 +|(% style="width:133px" %)A~|B|(% style="width:377px" %)Rule match if input is either 'A' or 'B'|(% style="width:194px" %)OUT_C
212 212  
213 213  Like all mapping rules, the output is either a Code, a Value or free text depending on the representation of the Component in the target Data Structure Definition.
214 214  
215 215  If the regular expression contains capture groups, these can be used in the definition of the output value, by specifying \//**n** //as an output value where //**n**// is the number of the capture group starting from 1. For example
216 216  
217 -|Regex|Target output|Example Input|Example Output
218 -|(((
219 -([0-9]{4})[0-
200 +(% style="width:720.294px" %)
201 +|(% style="width:199px" %)**Regex**|(% style="width:126px" %)**Target output**|(% style="width:192px" %)**Example Input**|(% style="width:200px" %)**Example Output**
202 +|(% style="width:199px" %)(((
203 +([0-9]{4})[0-9]([0-9]{1})
204 +)))|(% style="width:126px" %)\1-Q\2|(% style="width:192px" %)200933|(% style="width:200px" %)2009-Q3
220 220  
221 -9]([0-9]{1})
222 -)))|\1-Q\2|200933|2009-Q3
223 -
224 224  As regular expression rules can be used as a general catch-all if nothing else matches, the ordering of the rules is important. Rules should be tested starting with the highest priority, moving down the list until a match is found.
225 225  
226 226  The following example shows this:
227 227  
228 -|Priority|Regex|Description|Output
229 -|1|A|Rule match if input = 'A'|OUT_A
230 -|2|B|Rule match if input = 'B'|OUT_B
231 -|3|[A-Z]|Any character A-Z|OUT_C
210 +(% style="width:725.294px" %)
211 +|(% style="width:198px" %)**Priority**|(% style="width:148px" %)**Regex**|(% style="width:212px" %)**Description**|(% style="width:164px" %)**Output**
212 +|(% style="width:198px" %)1|(% style="width:148px" %)A|(% style="width:212px" %)Rule match if input = 'A'|(% style="width:164px" %)OUT_A
213 +|(% style="width:198px" %)2|(% style="width:148px" %)B|(% style="width:212px" %)Rule match if input = 'B'|(% style="width:164px" %)OUT_B
214 +|(% style="width:198px" %)3|(% style="width:148px" %)[A-Z]|(% style="width:212px" %)Any character A-Z|(% style="width:164px" %)OUT_C
232 232  
233 233  The input 'A' matches both the first and the last rule, but the first takes precedence having the higher priority. The output is OUT_A.
234 234  
... ... @@ -240,14 +240,16 @@
240 240  
241 241  For instance:
242 242  
243 -|Input String|Start|Length|Output
244 -|ABC_DEF_XYZ|5|3|DEF
245 -|XULADS|1|2|XU
226 +(% style="width:742.294px" %)
227 +|(% style="width:191px" %)**Input String**|(% style="width:154px" %)**Start**|(% style="width:211px" %)**Length**|(% style="width:182px" %)**Output**
228 +|(% style="width:191px" %)ABC_DEF_XYZ|(% style="width:154px" %)5|(% style="width:211px" %)3|(% style="width:182px" %)DEF
229 +|(% style="width:191px" %)XULADS|(% style="width:154px" %)1|(% style="width:211px" %)2|(% style="width:182px" %)XU
246 246  
247 247  Sub-strings can therefore be used for the conceptual rule //If starts with 'XU' map to Y// as shown in the following example:
248 248  
249 -|Start|Length|Source|Target
250 -|1|2|XU|Y
233 +(% style="width:740.294px" %)
234 +|(% style="width:194px" %)**Start**|(% style="width:151px" %)**Length**|(% style="width:208px" %)**Source**|(% style="width:183px" %)**Target**
235 +|(% style="width:194px" %)1|(% style="width:151px" %)2|(% style="width:208px" %)XU|(% style="width:183px" %)Y
251 251  
252 252  == 13.7 Mapping non-SDMX time formats to SDMX formats ==
253 253  
... ... @@ -259,15 +259,16 @@
259 259  
260 260  The output of a time-based mapping is derived from the output Frequency, which is either explicitly stated in the mapping or defined as the value output by a specific Dimension or Attribute in the output mapping. If the output frequency is unknown or if the SDMX format is not desired, then additional rules can be provided to specify the output date format for the given frequency Id. The default rules are:
261 261  
262 -|Frequency|Format|Example
263 -|A|YYYY|2010
264 -|D|YYYY-MM-DD|2010-01-01
265 -|I|YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss|2010-01T20:22:00
266 -|M|YYYY-MM|2010-01
267 -|Q|YYYY-Qn|2010-Q1
268 -|S|YYYY-Sn|2010-S1
269 -|T|YYYY-Tn|2010-T1
270 -|W|YYYY-Wn|YYYY-W53
247 +(% style="width:771.294px" %)
248 +|(% style="width:187px" %)**Frequency**|(% style="width:159px" %)**Format**|(% style="width:422px" %)**Example**
249 +|(% style="width:187px" %)A|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY|(% style="width:422px" %)2010
250 +|(% style="width:187px" %)D|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY-MM-DD|(% style="width:422px" %)2010-01-01
251 +|(% style="width:187px" %)I|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss|(% style="width:422px" %)2010-01T20:22:00
252 +|(% style="width:187px" %)M|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY-MM|(% style="width:422px" %)2010-01
253 +|(% style="width:187px" %)Q|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY-Qn|(% style="width:422px" %)2010-Q1
254 +|(% style="width:187px" %)S|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY-Sn|(% style="width:422px" %)2010-S1
255 +|(% style="width:187px" %)T|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY-Tn|(% style="width:422px" %)2010-T1
256 +|(% style="width:187px" %)W|(% style="width:159px" %)YYYY-Wn|(% style="width:422px" %)YYYY-W53
271 271  
272 272  In the case where the input frequency is lower than the output frequency, the mapping defaults to end of period, but can be explicitly set to start, end or mid-period.
273 273  
... ... @@ -280,36 +280,36 @@
280 280  
281 281  Date and time formats are specified by date and time pattern strings based on Java's Simple Date Format. Within date and time pattern strings, unquoted letters from 'A' to 'Z' and from 'a' to 'z' are interpreted as pattern letters representing the components of a date or time string. Text can be quoted using single quotes (') to avoid interpretation. "''" represents a single quote. All other characters are not interpreted; they're simply copied into the output string during formatting or matched against the input string during parsing.
282 282  
283 -Due to the fact that dates may differ per locale, an optional property, defining the locale of the pattern, is provided. This would assist processing of source dates, according to the given locale^^[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^44^^>>path:#sdfootnote44sym||name="sdfootnote44anc"]](%%)^^. An indicative list of examples is presented in the following table:
269 +Due to the fact that dates may differ per locale, an optional property, defining the locale of the pattern, is provided. This would assist processing of source dates, according to the given locale{{footnote}}Unidimensional datasets are those with a single 'indicator' or 'series code' dimension.{{/footnote}}. An indicative list of examples is presented in the following table:
284 284  
285 -|English (en)|Australia (AU)|en-AU
286 -|English (en)|Canada (CA)|en-CA
287 -|English (en)|United Kingdom (GB)|en-GB
288 -|English (en)|United States (US)|en-US
289 -|Estonian (et)|Estonia (EE)|et-EE
290 -|Finnish (fi)|Finland (FI)|fi-FI
291 -|French (fr)|Belgium (BE)|fr-BE
292 -|French (fr)|Canada (CA)|fr-CA
293 -|French (fr)|France (FR)|fr-FR
294 -|French (fr)|Luxembourg (LU)|fr-LU
295 -|French (fr)|Switzerland (CH)|fr-CH
296 -|German (de)|Austria (AT)|de-AT
297 -|German (de)|Germany (DE)|de-DE
271 +(% style="width:772.294px" %)
272 +|(% style="width:190px" %)English (en)|(% style="width:230px" %)Australia (AU)|(% style="width:348px" %)en-AU
273 +|(% style="width:190px" %)English (en)|(% style="width:230px" %)Canada (CA)|(% style="width:348px" %)en-CA
274 +|(% style="width:190px" %)English (en)|(% style="width:230px" %)United Kingdom (GB)|(% style="width:348px" %)en-GB
275 +|(% style="width:190px" %)English (en)|(% style="width:230px" %)United States (US)|(% style="width:348px" %)en-US
276 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Estonian (et)|(% style="width:230px" %)Estonia (EE)|(% style="width:348px" %)et-EE
277 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Finnish (fi)|(% style="width:230px" %)Finland (FI)|(% style="width:348px" %)fi-FI
278 +|(% style="width:190px" %)French (fr)|(% style="width:230px" %)Belgium (BE)|(% style="width:348px" %)fr-BE
279 +|(% style="width:190px" %)French (fr)|(% style="width:230px" %)Canada (CA)|(% style="width:348px" %)fr-CA
280 +|(% style="width:190px" %)French (fr)|(% style="width:230px" %)France (FR)|(% style="width:348px" %)fr-FR
281 +|(% style="width:190px" %)French (fr)|(% style="width:230px" %)Luxembourg (LU)|(% style="width:348px" %)fr-LU
282 +|(% style="width:190px" %)French (fr)|(% style="width:230px" %)Switzerland (CH)|(% style="width:348px" %)fr-CH
283 +|(% style="width:190px" %)German (de)|(% style="width:230px" %)Austria (AT)|(% style="width:348px" %)de-AT
284 +|(% style="width:190px" %)German (de)|(% style="width:230px" %)Germany (DE)|(% style="width:348px" %)de-DE
298 298  
299 -[[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_59eee18f.gif||alt="Shape8" height="1" width="192"]]
286 +(% style="width:773.294px" %)
287 +|(% style="width:190px" %)German (de)|(% style="width:234px" %)Luxembourg (LU)|(% style="width:345px" %)de-LU
288 +|(% style="width:190px" %)German (de)|(% style="width:234px" %)Switzerland (CH)|(% style="width:345px" %)de-CH
289 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Greek (el)|(% style="width:234px" %)Cyprus (CY)|(% style="width:345px" %)el-CY__([[*>>https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]])__
290 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Greek (el)|(% style="width:234px" %)Greece (GR)|(% style="width:345px" %)el-GR
291 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Hebrew (iw)|(% style="width:234px" %)Israel (IL)|(% style="width:345px" %)iw-IL
292 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Hindi (hi)|(% style="width:234px" %)India (IN)|(% style="width:345px" %)hi-IN
293 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Hungarian (hu)|(% style="width:234px" %)Hungary (HU)|(% style="width:345px" %)hu-HU
294 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Icelandic (is)|(% style="width:234px" %)Iceland (IS)|(% style="width:345px" %)is-IS
295 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Indonesian (in)|(% style="width:234px" %)Indonesia (ID)|(% style="width:345px" %)in-ID__([[*>>https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]])__
296 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Irish (ga)|(% style="width:234px" %)Ireland (IE)|(% style="width:345px" %)ga-IE__([[*>>https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]])__
297 +|(% style="width:190px" %)Italian (it)|(% style="width:234px" %)Italy (IT)|(% style="width:345px" %)it-IT
300 300  
301 -|German (de)|Luxembourg (LU)|de-LU
302 -|German (de)|Switzerland (CH)|de-CH
303 -|Greek (el)|Cyprus (CY)|el-CY[[__(*)__>>url:https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]][[url:https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]]
304 -|Greek (el)|Greece (GR)|el-GR
305 -|Hebrew (iw)|Israel (IL)|iw-IL
306 -|Hindi (hi)|India (IN)|hi-IN
307 -|Hungarian (hu)|Hungary (HU)|hu-HU
308 -|Icelandic (is)|Iceland (IS)|is-IS
309 -|Indonesian (in)|Indonesia (ID)|in-ID[[__(*)__>>url:https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]][[url:https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]]
310 -|Irish (ga)|Ireland (IE)|ga-IE[[__(*)__>>url:https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]][[url:https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/jdk8-jre8-suported-locales.html#cldrlocale]]
311 -|Italian (it)|Italy (IT)|it-IT
312 -
313 313  Examples
314 314  
315 315  22/06/1981 would be described as dd/MM/YYYY, with locale en-GB
... ... @@ -324,32 +324,30 @@
324 324  
325 325  The following pattern letters are defined (all other characters from 'A' to 'Z' and from 'a' to 'z' are reserved):
326 326  
327 -|Letter|Date or Time Component|Presentation|Examples
328 -|G|Era designator|[[Text>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#text]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#text]]|AD
329 -|yy|Year short (upper case is Year of Week^^[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^45^^>>path:#sdfootnote45sym||name="sdfootnote45anc"]](%%)^^)|[[Year>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#year]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#year]]|96
330 -|yyyy|Year Full (upper case is Year of Week)|Year|1996
331 -|MM|Month number in year starting with 1|Month|07
332 -|MMM|Month name short|Month|Jul
333 -|MMMM|Month name full|Month|July
334 -|ww|Week in year|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|27
335 -|W|Week in month|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|2
336 -|DD|Day in year|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|189
337 -|dd|Day in month|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|10
338 -|F|Day of week in month|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|2
339 -|E|Day name in week|[[Text>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#text]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#text]]|Tuesday; Tue
313 +(% style="width:896.294px" %)
314 +|(% style="width:133px" %)**Letter**|(% style="width:414px" %)**Date or Time Component**|(% style="width:157px" %)**Presentation**|(% style="width:172px" %)**Examples**
315 +|(% style="width:133px" %)G|(% style="width:414px" %)Era designator|(% style="width:157px" %)Text|(% style="width:172px" %)AD
316 +|(% style="width:133px" %)yy|(% style="width:414px" %)Year short (upper case is Year of Week{{footnote}}yyyy represents the calendar year while YYYY represents the year of the week, which is only relevant for 53 week years{{/footnote}})|(% style="width:157px" %)Year|(% style="width:172px" %)96
317 +|(% style="width:133px" %)yyyy|(% style="width:414px" %)Year Full (upper case is Year of Week)|(% style="width:157px" %)Year|(% style="width:172px" %)1996
318 +|(% style="width:133px" %)MM|(% style="width:414px" %)Month number in year starting with 1|(% style="width:157px" %)Month|(% style="width:172px" %)07
319 +|(% style="width:133px" %)MMM|(% style="width:414px" %)Month name short|(% style="width:157px" %)Month|(% style="width:172px" %)Jul
320 +|(% style="width:133px" %)MMMM|(% style="width:414px" %)Month name full|(% style="width:157px" %)Month|(% style="width:172px" %)July
321 +|(% style="width:133px" %)ww|(% style="width:414px" %)Week in year|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:172px" %)27
322 +|(% style="width:133px" %)W|(% style="width:414px" %)Week in month|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:172px" %)2
323 +|(% style="width:133px" %)DD|(% style="width:414px" %)Day in year|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:172px" %)189
324 +|(% style="width:133px" %)dd|(% style="width:414px" %)Day in month|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:172px" %)10
325 +|(% style="width:133px" %)F|(% style="width:414px" %)Day of week in month|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:172px" %)2
326 +|(% style="width:133px" %)E|(% style="width:414px" %)Day name in week|(% style="width:157px" %)Text|(% style="width:172px" %)Tuesday; Tue
327 +|(% style="width:132px" %)U|(% style="width:414px" %)Day number of week (1 = Monday, ..., 7 = Sunday)|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)1
328 +|(% style="width:132px" %)HH|(% style="width:414px" %)Hour in day (0-23)|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)0
329 +|(% style="width:132px" %)kk|(% style="width:414px" %)Hour in day (1-24)|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)24
330 +|(% style="width:132px" %)KK|(% style="width:414px" %)Hour in am/pm (0-11)|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)0
331 +|(% style="width:132px" %)hh|(% style="width:414px" %)Hour in am/pm (1-12)|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)12
332 +|(% style="width:132px" %)mm|(% style="width:414px" %)Minute in hour|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)30
333 +|(% style="width:132px" %)ss|(% style="width:414px" %)Second in minute|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)55
334 +|(% style="width:132px" %)S|(% style="width:414px" %)Millisecond|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)978
335 +|(% style="width:132px" %)n|(% style="width:414px" %)Number of periods, used after a SDMX Frequency Identifier such as M, Q, D (month, quarter, day)|(% style="width:157px" %)Number|(% style="width:217px" %)12
340 340  
341 -[[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_59eee18f.gif||alt="Shape9" height="1" width="192"]]
342 -
343 -|U|Day number of week (1 = Monday, ..., 7 = Sunday)|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|1
344 -|HH|Hour in day (0-23)|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|0
345 -|kk|Hour in day (1-24)|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|24
346 -|KK|Hour in am/pm (0-11)|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|0
347 -|hh|Hour in am/pm (1-12)|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|12
348 -|mm|Minute in hour|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|30
349 -|ss|Second in minute|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|55
350 -|S|Millisecond|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|978
351 -|n|Number of periods, used after a SDMX Frequency Identifier such as M, Q, D (month, quarter, day)|[[Number>>url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]][[url:https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html#number]]|12
352 -
353 353  The model is illustrated below:
354 354  
355 355  [[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_295af259.jpg||height="265" width="477"]]
... ... @@ -370,17 +370,16 @@
370 370  * microsecond
371 371  * nanosecond
372 372  
373 -|Numerical datetime systems|Base|Period
374 -|(((
357 +(% style="width:573.294px" %)
358 +|(% style="width:276px" %)**Numerical datetime systems**|(% style="width:117px" %)**Base**|(% style="width:177px" %)**Period**
359 +|(% style="width:276px" %)(((
375 375  Epoch Time (UNIX)
376 -
377 377  Milliseconds since 01 Jan 1970
378 -)))|1970|millisecond
379 -|(((
362 +)))|(% style="width:117px" %)1970|(% style="width:177px" %)millisecond
363 +|(% style="width:276px" %)(((
380 380  Windows System Time
381 -
382 382  Milliseconds since 01 Jan 1601
383 -)))|1601|millisecond
366 +)))|(% style="width:117px" %)1601|(% style="width:177px" %)millisecond
384 384  
385 385  The example above illustrates numerical based datetime mapping rules for two commonly used time standards.
386 386  
... ... @@ -402,41 +402,34 @@
402 402  
403 403  The main use case is setting the value of Observation Attributes in the target dataset.
404 404  
405 -|Rule|Source|Target
406 -|1|(((
388 +(% style="width:786.294px" %)
389 +|(% style="width:92px" %)**Rule**|(% style="width:377px" %)**Source**|(% style="width:315px" %)**Target**
390 +|(% style="width:92px" %)1|(% style="width:377px" %)(((
407 407  If
408 -
409 409  INDICATOR=XULADS; and TIME_PERIOD=2007.
410 -)))|(((
393 +)))|(% style="width:315px" %)(((
411 411  Set
412 -
413 413  OBS_CONF=F
414 414  )))
415 -|2|(((
397 +|(% style="width:92px" %)2|(% style="width:377px" %)(((
416 416  If
417 -
418 418  INDICATOR=XULADS; and TIME_PERIOD=2008.
419 -)))|(((
400 +)))|(% style="width:315px" %)(((
420 420  Set
421 -
422 422  OBS_CONF=F
423 423  )))
424 -|3|(((
404 +|(% style="width:92px" %)3|(% style="width:377px" %)(((
425 425  If
426 -
427 427  INDICATOR=XULADS; and TIME_PERIOD=2009.
428 -)))|(((
407 +)))|(% style="width:315px" %)(((
429 429  Set
430 -
431 431  OBS_CONF=F
432 432  )))
433 -|4|(((
411 +|(% style="width:92px" %)4|(% style="width:377px" %)(((
434 434  If
435 -
436 436  INDICATOR=XULADS; and TIME_PERIOD=2010.
437 -)))|(((
414 +)))|(% style="width:315px" %)(((
438 438  Set
439 -
440 440  OBS_CONF=**C**
441 441  )))
442 442  
... ... @@ -450,27 +450,22 @@
450 450  
451 451  By specifying validity periods, the example from Section 13.8 can be re-written using two rules as follows:
452 452  
453 -|Rule|Source|Target
454 -|1|(((
429 +(% style="width:808.294px" %)
430 +|(% style="width:93px" %)**Rule**|(% style="width:385px" %)**Source**|(% style="width:328px" %)**Target**
431 +|(% style="width:93px" %)1|(% style="width:385px" %)(((
455 455  If
456 -
457 457  INDICATOR=XULADS.
458 -
459 459  Validity Period start period=2007 end period=2009
460 -)))|(((
435 +)))|(% style="width:328px" %)(((
461 461  Set
462 -
463 463  OBS_CONF=F
464 464  )))
465 -|2|(((
439 +|(% style="width:93px" %)2|(% style="width:385px" %)(((
466 466  If
467 -
468 468  INDICATOR=XULADS.
469 -
470 470  Validity Period start period=2010
471 -)))|(((
443 +)))|(% style="width:328px" %)(((
472 472  Set
473 -
474 474  OBS_CONF=F** **
475 475  )))
476 476  
... ... @@ -482,28 +482,20 @@
482 482  
483 483  === 13.10.1 Many to one mapping (N-1) ===
484 484  
485 -|Source|Map To
486 -|(((
456 +(% style="width:762.294px" %)
457 +|(% style="width:474px" %)**Source**|(% style="width:284px" %)**Map To**
458 +|(% style="width:474px" %)(((
487 487  **FREQ**="A"
488 -
489 489  ADJUSTMENT="N"
490 -
491 491  **REF_AREA**="PL"
492 -
493 493  **COUNTERPART_AREA**="W0"
494 -
495 495  REF_SECTOR="S1"
496 -
497 497  COUNTERPART_SECTOR="S1" ACCOUNTING_ENTRY="B"
498 -
499 499  STO="B5G"
500 -)))|(((
466 +)))|(% style="width:284px" %)(((
501 501  FREQ="A"
502 -
503 503  REF_AREA="PL"
504 -
505 505  COUNTERPART_AREA="W0"
506 -
507 507  INDICATOR="IND_ABC"
508 508  )))
509 509  
... ... @@ -531,28 +531,24 @@
531 531  
532 532  The following representation mapping can be used to explicitly map each age to an output code.
533 533  
534 -:
535 -
536 536  (((
537 -|Source Input Free Text|Desired Output Code Id
538 -|0|A
539 -|1|A
540 -|2|A
541 -|3|B
542 -|4|B
498 +(% style="width:669.294px" %)
499 +|(% style="width:218px" %)**Source Input Free Text**|(% style="width:448px" %)**Desired Output Code Id**
500 +|(% style="width:218px" %)0|(% style="width:448px" %)A
501 +|(% style="width:218px" %)1|(% style="width:448px" %)A
502 +|(% style="width:218px" %)2|(% style="width:448px" %)A
503 +|(% style="width:218px" %)3|(% style="width:448px" %)B
504 +|(% style="width:218px" %)4|(% style="width:448px" %)B
543 543  )))
544 544  
545 545  If this mapping takes advantage of regular expressions it can be expressed in two 3464 rules:
546 546  
547 -[[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_8c1afe2b.gif||alt="Shape10" height="1" width="302"]]
548 -
549 549  __Regular Expression __Desired Output
550 550  
551 -:
552 -
553 553  (((
554 -|[0-2]|A
555 -|[3-4]|B
512 +(% style="width:675.294px" %)
513 +|(% style="width:219px" %)[0-2]|(% style="width:453px" %)A
514 +|(% style="width:219px" %)[3-4]|(% style="width:453px" %)B
556 556  )))
557 557  
558 558  === 13.10.3 Observation Attributes for Time Period ===
... ... @@ -559,21 +559,18 @@
559 559  
560 560  This use case is where a specific observation for a specific time period has an attribute 3468 value.
561 561  
562 -:
563 -
564 564  (((
565 -|Input INDICATOR|Input TIME_PERIOD|Output OBS_CONF
566 -|XULADS|2008|C
567 -|XULADS|2009|C
568 -|XULADS|2010|C
522 +(% style="width:689.294px" %)
523 +|(% style="width:220px" %)**Input INDICATOR**|(% style="width:223px" %)**Input TIME_PERIOD**|(% style="width:243px" %)**Output OBS_CONF**
524 +|(% style="width:220px" %)XULADS|(% style="width:223px" %)2008|(% style="width:243px" %)C
525 +|(% style="width:220px" %)XULADS|(% style="width:223px" %)2009|(% style="width:243px" %)C
526 +|(% style="width:220px" %)XULADS|(% style="width:223px" %)2010|(% style="width:243px" %)C
569 569  )))
570 570  
571 571  __Or using a validity period on the Representation Mapping__:
572 572  
573 -[[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_6dbf7f.gif||alt="Shape11" height="36" width="555"]] Input INDICATOR Valid From/ Valid To Output OBS_CONF
531 +Input INDICATOR Valid From/ Valid To Output OBS_CONF XULADS 2008/2010 C
574 574  
575 -XULADS 2008/2010 C
576 -
577 577  === 13.10.4 Time mapping ===
578 578  
579 579  This use case is to create a time period from an input that does not respect SDMXTime Formats.