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

From version 3.6
edited by Helena
on 2025/05/15 23:54
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To version 4.1
edited by Helena
on 2025/05/16 00:05
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Summary

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Content
... ... @@ -102,29 +102,27 @@
102 102  
103 103  Further to the above, the mapping between the non-native data types is presented in the table below:
104 104  
105 -(% style="width:1026.29px" %)
106 -|(% style="width:159px" %)**SDMX Facet**|(% style="width:179px" %)**XML Schema**|(% style="width:683px" %)**JSON schema **"**pattern**"{{footnote}}Regular expressions, as specified in W3C XML Schema Definition Language (XSD) 1.1 Part 2: Datatypes.{{/footnote}} **for "string" type**
107 -|(% style="width:159px" %)GregorianYear|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gYear|(% style="width:683px" %)(((
105 +(% style="width:1146.29px" %)
106 +|(% style="width:159px" %)**SDMX Facet**|(% style="width:179px" %)**XML Schema**|(% style="width:800px" %)**JSON schema **"**pattern**"{{footnote}}Regular expressions, as specified in W3C XML Schema Definition Language (XSD) 1.1 Part 2: Datatypes.{{/footnote}} **for "string" type**
107 +|(% style="width:159px" %)GregorianYear|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gYear|(% style="width:800px" %)(((
108 108  "^-?( [1-9] [0-9] {3,}|0[0-9]{3}) (Z| (\ + | -) ((0 [0 - 9]| 1[0 - 3]):[0 - 5] [0 - 9] | 14:00))?$"
109 109  )))
110 -|(% style="width:159px" %)GregorianMonth|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gYearMonth|(% style="width:683px" %)(((
110 +|(% style="width:159px" %)GregorianMonth|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gYearMonth|(% style="width:800px" %)(((
111 111  "^-?([1-9] [0-9] {3,}|0 [0-9] {3}) - (0 [1-9]|1[ 0- 2])(Z|(\+|-)((0[0-9]|1[0-3]):[0-5] [0 - 9]|14:00))?$"
112 112  )))
113 -
114 -(% style="width:1030.29px" %)
115 -|(% style="width:163px" %)GregorianDay|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:date|(% style="width:684px" %)(((
113 +|(% style="width:163px" %)GregorianDay|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:date|(% style="width:800px" %)(((
116 116  "^-?([1-9][0-9]{3,}|0[0-9]{3})-(0[1-9]|1[0-2])- (0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])(Z|(\+|-)((0[0-9]|1[0- 3]):[0-5][0-9]|14:00))?$"
117 117  )))
118 -|(% style="width:163px" %)Day|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gDay|(% style="width:684px" %)(((
116 +|(% style="width:163px" %)Day|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gDay|(% style="width:800px" %)(((
119 119  "^~-~--(0[1-9]|[12][0-9]|3[01])(Z|(\+|- )((0[0-9]|1[0-3]):[0-5][0-9]|14:00))?$"
120 120  )))
121 -|(% style="width:163px" %)MonthDay|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gMonthDay|(% style="width:684px" %)(((
119 +|(% style="width:163px" %)MonthDay|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:gMonthDay|(% style="width:800px" %)(((
122 122  "^~-~-(0[1-9]|1[0-2])-(0[1-9]|[12][0- 9]|3[01])(Z|(\+|-)((0[0-9]|1[0-3]):[0-5][0- 9]|14:00))?$"
123 123  )))
124 -|(% style="width:163px" %)Month|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:Month|(% style="width:684px" %)(((
122 +|(% style="width:163px" %)Month|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:Month|(% style="width:800px" %)(((
125 125  "^~-~-(0[1-9]|1[0-2])(Z|(\+|-)((0[0-9]|1[0- 3]):[0-5][0-9]|14:00))?$"
126 126  )))
127 -|(% style="width:163px" %)Duration|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:duration|(% style="width:684px" %)(((
125 +|(% style="width:163px" %)Duration|(% style="width:179px" %)xsd:duration|(% style="width:800px" %)(((
128 128  "^-?P[0-9]+Y?([0-9]+M)?([0-9]+D)?(T([0- 9]+H)?([0-9]+M)?([0-9]+(\.[0-9]+)?S)?)?$"
129 129  )))
130 130  
... ... @@ -140,17 +140,14 @@
140 140  
141 141  The hierarchy of time formats is as follows (**bold** indicates a category which is made up of multiple formats, //italic// indicates a distinct format):
142 142  
143 -* **Observational Time Period **o **Standard Time Period**
141 +* **Observational Time Period**
142 +** **Standard Time Period**
143 +*** **Basic Time Period**
144 +**** **Gregorian Time Period**
145 +**** //Date Time//
146 +*** **Reporting Time Period**
147 +** **//Time Range//**
144 144  
145 -▪ **Basic Time Period**
146 -
147 -* **Gregorian Time Period**
148 -* //Date Time//
149 -
150 -▪ **Reporting Time Period**
151 -
152 -o //Time Range//
153 -
154 154  The details of these time period categories and of the distinct formats which make them up are detailed in the sections to follow.
155 155  
156 156  === {{id name="_Toc291508"/}}4.2.2 Observational Time Period ===
... ... @@ -169,12 +169,16 @@
169 169  
170 170  Representation: xs:gYear (YYYY)
171 171  
172 -Period: the start of January 1 to the end of December 31 **Gregorian Year Month**:
167 +Period: the start of January 1 to the end of December 31
173 173  
169 +**Gregorian Year Month**:
170 +
174 174  Representation: xs:gYearMonth (YYYY-MM)
175 175  
176 -Period: the start of the first day of the month to end of the last day of the month **Gregorian Day**:
173 +Period: the start of the first day of the month to end of the last day of the month
177 177  
175 +**Gregorian Day**:
176 +
178 178  Representation: xs:date (YYYY-MM-DD)
179 179  
180 180  Period: the start of the day (00:00:00) to the end of the day (23:59:59)
... ... @@ -183,7 +183,7 @@
183 183  
184 184  This is used to unambiguously state that a date-time represents an observation at a single point in time. Therefore, if one wants to use SDMX for data which is measured at a distinct point in time rather than being reported over a period, the date-time representation can be used.
185 185  
186 -Representation: xs:dateTime (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss)^^[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^2^^>>path:#sdfootnote2sym||name="sdfootnote2anc"]](%%)^^
185 +Representation: xs:dateTime (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss){{footnote}}The seconds can be reported fractionally{{/footnote}}
187 187  
188 188  === {{id name="_Toc291512"/}}4.2.6 Standard Reporting Period ===
189 189  
... ... @@ -207,8 +207,10 @@
207 207  
208 208  Limit per year: 1
209 209  
210 -Representation: common:ReportingYearType (YYYY-A1, e.g. 2000-A1) **Reporting Semester:**
209 +Representation: common:ReportingYearType (YYYY-A1, e.g. 2000-A1)
211 211  
211 +**Reporting Semester:**
212 +
212 212  Period Indicator: S
213 213  
214 214  Period Duration: P6M (six months)
... ... @@ -217,8 +217,6 @@
217 217  
218 218  Representation: common:ReportingSemesterType (YYYY-Ss, e.g. 2000-S2)
219 219  
220 -[[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_59eee18f.gif||alt="Shape2" height="1" width="192"]]
221 -
222 222  **Reporting Trimester:**
223 223  
224 224  Period Indicator: T
... ... @@ -227,8 +227,10 @@
227 227  
228 228  Limit per year: 3
229 229  
230 -Representation: common:ReportingTrimesterType (YYYY-Tt, e.g. 2000-T3) **Reporting Quarter:**
229 +Representation: common:ReportingTrimesterType (YYYY-Tt, e.g. 2000-T3)
231 231  
231 +**Reporting Quarter:**
232 +
232 232  Period Indicator: Q
233 233  
234 234  Period Duration: P3M (three months)
... ... @@ -235,8 +235,10 @@
235 235  
236 236  Limit per year: 4
237 237  
238 -Representation: common:ReportingQuarterType (YYYY-Qq, e.g. 2000-Q4) **Reporting Month**:
239 +Representation: common:ReportingQuarterType (YYYY-Qq, e.g. 2000-Q4)
239 239  
241 +**Reporting Month**:
242 +
240 240  Period Indicator: M
241 241  
242 242  Period Duration: P1M (one month)
... ... @@ -257,7 +257,7 @@
257 257  
258 258  Representation: common:ReportingWeekType (YYYY-Www, e.g. 2000-W53)
259 259  
260 -Notes: There are either 52 or 53 weeks in a reporting year. This is based on the ISO 8601 definition of a week (Monday - Saturday), where the first week of a reporting year is defined as the week with the first Thursday on or after the reporting year start day.^^[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^3^^>>path:#sdfootnote3sym||name="sdfootnote3anc"]](%%)^^ The reporting week is always represented as two digits, therefore 1-9 are 0 padded (e.g. 01). This allows the values to be sorted chronologically using textual sorting methods.
263 +Notes: There are either 52 or 53 weeks in a reporting year. This is based on the ISO 8601 definition of a week (Monday - Saturday), where the first week of a reporting year is defined as the week with the first Thursday on or after the reporting year start day.^^[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^3^^>>path:#sdfootnote3sym||name="sdfootnote3anc"]](%%)^^ The reporting week is always represented as two digits, therefore 1-9 are 0 padded (e.g. 01). This allows the values to be sorted chronologically using textual sorting methods.
261 261  
262 262  **Reporting Day**:
263 263  
... ... @@ -291,19 +291,19 @@
291 291  
292 292  This is the [REPORTING_YEAR_START_DATE]
293 293  
294 -1.
297 +1.
295 295  11. **If the [PERIOD_INDICATOR] is W:**
296 296  111. **If [REPORTING_YEAR_START_DATE] is a Friday, Saturday, or Sunday:**
297 297  
298 -Add^^[[(% class="wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink wikiinternallink" %)^^4^^>>path:#sdfootnote4sym||name="sdfootnote4anc"]](%%)^^ (P3D, P2D, or P1D respectively) to the [REPORTING_YEAR_START_DATE]. The result is the [REPORTING_YEAR_BASE].
301 +Add{{footnote}}The rules for adding durations to a date time are described in the W3C XML Schema specification. See http://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema-2/#adding-durations-to-dateTimes for further details.{{/footnote}} (P3D, P2D, or P1D respectively) to the [REPORTING_YEAR_START_DATE]. The result is the [REPORTING_YEAR_BASE].
299 299  
300 -1.
301 -11.
303 +1.
304 +11.
302 302  111. **If [REPORTING_YEAR_START_DATE] is a Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday:**
303 303  
304 304  Add^^4^^ (P0D, -P1D, -P2D, or -P3D respectively) to the [REPORTING_YEAR_START_DATE]. The result is the [REPORTING_YEAR_BASE].
305 305  
306 -1.
309 +1.
307 307  11. **Else:**
308 308  
309 309  The [REPORTING_YEAR_START_DATE] is the [REPORTING_YEAR_BASE].
... ... @@ -318,8 +318,10 @@
318 318  11. If the [PERIOD_INDICATOR] is D, the [PERIOD_DURATION] is P1D.
319 319  1. **Determine [PERIOD_START]:**
320 320  
321 -Subtract one from the [PERIOD_VALUE] and multiply this by the [PERIOD_DURATION]. Add^^4^^ this to the [REPORTING_YEAR_BASE]. The result is the [PERIOD_START]. **4. Determine the [PERIOD_END]:**
324 +Subtract one from the [PERIOD_VALUE] and multiply this by the [PERIOD_DURATION]. Add^^4^^ this to the [REPORTING_YEAR_BASE]. The result is the [PERIOD_START].
322 322  
326 +**4. Determine the [PERIOD_END]:**
327 +
323 323  Multiply the [PERIOD_VALUE] by the [PERIOD_DURATION]. Add^^4^^ this to the [REPORTING_YEAR_BASE] add^^4^^ -P1D. The result is the [PERIOD_END].
324 324  
325 325  For all of these ranges, the bounds include the beginning of the [PERIOD_START] (i.e. 00:00:00) and the end of the [PERIOD_END] (i.e. 23:59:59).
... ... @@ -384,29 +384,29 @@
384 384  
385 385  In version 2.0 of SDMX there is a recommendation to use the time format attribute to gives additional information on the way time is represented in the message. Following an appraisal of its usefulness this is no longer required. However, it is still possible, if required , to include the time format attribute in SDMX-ML.
386 386  
387 -|Code|Format
388 -|OTP|Observational Time Period: Superset of all SDMX time formats (Gregorian Time Period, Reporting Time Period, and Time Range)
389 -|STP|Standard Time Period: Superset of Gregorian and Reporting Time Periods
390 -|GTP|Superset of all Gregorian Time Periods and date-time
391 -|RTP|Superset of all Reporting Time Periods
392 -|TR|(((
393 -Time Range: Start time and duration (YYYY-MM-
394 -
395 -DD(Thh:mm:ss)?/<duration>)
392 +(% style="width:771.294px" %)
393 +|Code|(% style="width:659px" %)Format
394 +|OTP|(% style="width:659px" %)Observational Time Period: Superset of all SDMX time formats (Gregorian Time Period, Reporting Time Period, and Time Range)
395 +|STP|(% style="width:659px" %)Standard Time Period: Superset of Gregorian and Reporting Time Periods
396 +|GTP|(% style="width:659px" %)Superset of all Gregorian Time Periods and date-time
397 +|RTP|(% style="width:659px" %)Superset of all Reporting Time Periods
398 +|TR|(% style="width:659px" %)(((
399 +Time Range: Start time and duration (YYYY-MM-DD(Thh:mm:ss)?/<duration>)
396 396  )))
397 -|GY|Gregorian Year (YYYY)
398 -|GTM|Gregorian Year Month (YYYY-MM)
399 -|GD|Gregorian Day (YYYY-MM-DD)
400 -|DT|Distinct Point: date-time (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss)
401 -|RY|Reporting Year (YYYY-A1)
402 -|RS|Reporting Semester (YYYY-Ss)
403 -|RT|Reporting Trimester (YYYY-Tt)
404 -|RQ|Reporting Quarter (YYYY-Qq)
405 -|RM|Reporting Month (YYYY-Mmm)
406 -|RW|Reporting Week (YYYY-Www)
407 -|RD|Reporting Day (YYYY-Dddd)
401 +|GY|(% style="width:659px" %)Gregorian Year (YYYY)
402 +|GTM|(% style="width:659px" %)Gregorian Year Month (YYYY-MM)
403 +|GD|(% style="width:659px" %)Gregorian Day (YYYY-MM-DD)
404 +|DT|(% style="width:659px" %)Distinct Point: date-time (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss)
405 +|RY|(% style="width:659px" %)Reporting Year (YYYY-A1)
406 +|RS|(% style="width:659px" %)Reporting Semester (YYYY-Ss)
407 +|RT|(% style="width:659px" %)Reporting Trimester (YYYY-Tt)
408 +|RQ|(% style="width:659px" %)Reporting Quarter (YYYY-Qq)
409 +|RM|(% style="width:659px" %)Reporting Month (YYYY-Mmm)
410 +|RW|(% style="width:659px" %)Reporting Week (YYYY-Www)
411 +|RD|(% style="width:659px" %)Reporting Day (YYYY-Dddd)
408 408  
409 -==== Table 1: SDMX-ML Time Format Codes ====
413 +(% class="wikigeneratedid" id="HTable1:SDMX-MLTimeFormatCodes" %)
414 +Table 1: SDMX-ML Time Format Codes
410 410  
411 411  === {{id name="_Toc291515"/}}4.2.9 Time Zones ===
412 412  
... ... @@ -453,12 +453,13 @@
453 453  
454 454  Fundamental to processing a time value parameter in a query message is understanding that all time periods should be handled as a distinct range of time. Since the time parameter in the query is paired with an operator, this also effectively represents a distinct range of time. Therefore, a system processing the query must simply match the data where the time period for requested parameter is encompassed by the time period resulting from value of the query parameter. The following table details how the operators should be interpreted for any time period provided as a parameter.
455 455  
456 -|**Operator**|**Rule**
457 -|Greater Than|Any data after the last moment of the period
458 -|Less Than|Any data before the first moment of the period
459 -|Greater Than or Equal To|Any data on or after the first moment of the period
460 -|Less Than or Equal To|Any data on or before the last moment of the period
461 -|Equal To|Any data which falls on or after the first moment of the period and before or on the last moment of the period
461 +(% style="width:1020.29px" %)
462 +|(% style="width:236px" %)**Operator**|(% style="width:781px" %)**Rule**
463 +|(% style="width:236px" %)Greater Than|(% style="width:781px" %)Any data after the last moment of the period
464 +|(% style="width:236px" %)Less Than|(% style="width:781px" %)Any data before the first moment of the period
465 +|(% style="width:236px" %)Greater Than or Equal To|(% style="width:781px" %)Any data on or after the first moment of the period
466 +|(% style="width:236px" %)Less Than or Equal To|(% style="width:781px" %)Any data on or before the last moment of the period
467 +|(% style="width:236px" %)Equal To|(% style="width:781px" %)Any data which falls on or after the first moment of the period and before or on the last moment of the period
462 462  
463 463  Reporting Time Periods as query parameters are handled like this: any data within the bounds of the reporting period for the year is matched, regardless of the actual start day of the reporting year. In addition, data reported against a normal calendar period is matched if it falls within the bounds of the time parameter based on a reporting year start day of January 1. When determining whether another reporting period falls within the bounds of a report period query parameter, one will have to take into account the actual time period to compare weeks and days to higher order report periods. This will be demonstrated in the examples to follow.
464 464  
... ... @@ -507,7 +507,7 @@
507 507  
508 508  Versioning operates at the level of versionable and maintainable objects in the SDMX information model. Within the SDMX Structure and MetadataSet messages, there is a well-defined pattern for artefact versioning and referencing. The artefact identifiers are qualified by their version numbers – that is, an object with an Agency of "A", and ID of "X" and a version of "1.0.0" is a different object than one with an Agency of "A", an ID of "X", and a version of "1.1.0".
509 509  
510 -As of SDMX 3.0, the versioning rules are extended to allow for truly versioned artefacts through the implementation of the rules of the well-known practice called "Semantic Versioning" [[(>>url:http://semver.org/]][[__http:~~/~~/semver.org__>>url:http://semver.org/]][[)>>url:http://semver.org/]], in addition to the legacy non-restrictive versioning scheme. In addition, the "isFinal" property is removed from //MaintainableArtefact//. According to the legacy versioning, any artefact defined without a version is equivalent to following the legacy versioning, thus having version ‘1.0’.
516 +As of SDMX 3.0, the versioning rules are extended to allow for truly versioned artefacts through the implementation of the rules of the well-known practice called "Semantic Versioning" ([[__http:~~/~~/semver.org__>>https://http:semver.org]]), in addition to the legacy non-restrictive versioning scheme. In addition, the "isFinal" property is removed from //MaintainableArtefact//. According to the legacy versioning, any artefact defined without a version is equivalent to following the legacy versioning, thus having version ‘1.0’.
511 511  
512 512  === 4.3.1 Non-versioned artefacts ===
513 513  
... ... @@ -515,8 +515,6 @@
515 515  
516 516  Many existing organisation’s data management systems work with version-less structures and apply ad-hoc structural metadata governance processes. The new nonversioned artefacts will allow supporting those numerous situations, where organisations do not manage version numbers.
517 517  
518 -[[image:SDMX 3-0-0 SECTION 6 FINAL-1.0_en_59eee18f.gif||alt="Shape3" height="1" width="192"]]
519 -
520 520  2010-Q3 (with a reporting year start day of ~-~-01-01) starts on 2010-07-01. This is day 4 of week 26, therefore the first week matched is week 27.
521 521  
522 522  2010-Q3 (with a reporting year start day of ~-~-07-01) starts on 2011-01-01. This is day 6 of week 27, therefore the first week matched is week 28.