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

From version 1.10
edited by Helena
on 2025/06/16 13:03
Change comment: There is no comment for this version
To version 1.21
edited by Helena
on 2025/06/16 13:26
Change comment: There is no comment for this version

Summary

Details

Page properties
Content
... ... @@ -2,8 +2,7 @@
2 2  {{toc/}}
3 3  {{/box}}
4 4  
5 -1.
6 -11. Introduction
5 +== 12.1 Introduction ==
7 7  
8 8  The Validation and Transformation Language (VTL) supports the definition of Transformations, which are algorithms to calculate new data starting from already existing ones{{footnote}}The Validation and Transformation Language is a standard language designed and published under the SDMX initiative. VTL is described in the VTL User and Reference Guides available on the SDMX website https://sdmx.org.{{/footnote}}. The purpose of the VTL in the SDMX context is to enable the:
9 9  
... ... @@ -19,10 +19,10 @@
19 19  
20 20  This section does not explain the VTL language or any of the content published in the VTL guides. Rather, this is a description of how the VTL can be used in the SDMX context and applied to SDMX artefacts.
21 21  
22 -1.
23 -11. References to SDMX artefacts from VTL statements
24 -111. Introduction
21 +== 12.2 References to SDMX artefacts from VTL statements ==
25 25  
23 +=== 12.2.1 Introduction ===
24 +
26 26  The VTL can manipulate SDMX artefacts (or objects) by referencing them through predefined conventional names (aliases).
27 27  
28 28  The alias of an SDMX artefact can be its URN (Universal Resource Name), an abbreviation of its URN or another user-defined name.
... ... @@ -33,9 +33,7 @@
33 33  
34 34  The references through the URN and the abbreviated URN are described in the following paragraphs.
35 35  
36 -1.
37 -11.
38 -111. References through the URN
35 +=== 12.2.2 References through the URN ===
39 39  
40 40  This approach has the advantage that in the VTL code the URN of the referenced artefacts is directly intelligible by a human reader but has the drawback that the references are verbose.
41 41  
... ... @@ -52,10 +52,8 @@
52 52  
53 53  The generic structure of the URN is the following:
54 54  
55 -SDMXprefix.SDMX-IM-package-name.class-name=agency-id:maintainedobject-id
52 +SDMXprefix.SDMX-IM-package-name.class-name=agency-id:maintainedobject-id (maintainedobject-version).*container-object-id.object-id
56 56  
57 -(maintainedobject-version).*container-object-id.object-id
58 -
59 59  The **SDMXprefix** is "urn:sdmx:org", always the same for all SDMX artefacts.
60 60  
61 61  The SDMX-IM-package-name** **is the concatenation of the string** **"sdmx.infomodel." with the package-name, which the artefact belongs to. For example, for referencing a Dataflow the SDMX-IM-package-name is "sdmx.infomodel.datastructure", because the class Dataflow belongs to the package "datastructure".
... ... @@ -76,28 +76,21 @@
76 76  
77 77  The maintainedobject-version is the version, according to the SDMX versioning rules, of the maintained object which the artefact belongs to (for example, possible versions might be 1.0, 2.3, 1.0.0, 2.1.0 or 3.1.2).
78 78  
79 -The container-object-id does not apply to the classes that can be referenced in VTL Transformations, therefore is not present in their URN
74 +The container-object-id does not apply to the classes that can be referenced in VTL Transformations, therefore is not present in their URN.
80 80  
81 81  The object-id is the name of the non-maintainable artefact (when the artefact is maintainable its name is already specified as the maintainedobject-id, see above), in particular it has to be specified:
82 82  
83 -* if the artefact is a Dimension, TimeDimension, Measure or
84 -
85 -DataAttribute (the object-id is the name of one of the artefacts above, which are data structure components)
86 -
78 +* if the artefact is a Dimension, TimeDimension, Measure or DataAttribute (the object-id is the name of one of the artefacts above, which are data structure components)
87 87  * if the artefact is a Concept (the object-id is the name of the Concept)
88 88  
89 89  For example, by using the URN, the VTL Transformation that sums two SDMX Dataflows DF1 and DF2 and assigns the result to a third persistent Dataflow DFR, assuming that DF1, DF2 and DFR are the maintainedobject-id of the three Dataflows, that their version is 1.0.0 and their Agency is AG, would be written as{{footnote}}Since these references to SDMX objects include non-permitted characters as per the VTL ID notation, they need to be included between single quotes, according to the VTL rules for irregular names.{{/footnote}}:
90 90  
91 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DFR(1.0.0)' <-
83 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DFR(1.0.0)' <-
84 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF1(1.0.0)' +
85 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF2(1.0.0)'
92 92  
93 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF1(1.0.0)' +
87 +=== 12.2.3 Abbreviation of the URN ===
94 94  
95 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF2(1.0.0)'
96 -
97 -1.
98 -11.
99 -111. Abbreviation of the URN
100 -
101 101  The complete formulation of the URN described above is exhaustive but verbose, even for very simple statements. In order to reduce the verbosity through a simplified identifier and make the work of transformation definers easier, proper abbreviations of the URN are possible. Using this approach, the referenced artefacts remain intelligible in the VTL code by a human reader.
102 102  
103 103  The URN can be abbreviated by omitting the parts that are not essential for the identification of the artefact or that can be deduced from other available information, including the context in which the invocation is made. The possible abbreviations are described below.
... ... @@ -104,15 +104,14 @@
104 104  
105 105  * The SDMXprefix can be omitted for all the SDMX objects, because it is a prefixed string (urn:sdmx:org), always the same for SDMX objects.
106 106  * The SDMX-IM-package-name** **can be omitted as well because it can be deduced from the class-name that follows it (the table of the SDMX-IM packages and classes that allows this deduction is in the SDMX 2.1 Standards - Section 5 - Registry Specifications, paragraph 6.2.3). In particular, considering the object classes of the artefacts that VTL can reference, the package is:
107 -** "datastructure" for the classes Dataflow, Dimension, TimeDimension, Measure, DataAttribute, o "conceptscheme" for the class Concept, o "codelist" for the class Codelist.
95 +** "datastructure" for the classes Dataflow, Dimension, TimeDimension, Measure, DataAttribute,
96 +** "conceptscheme" for the class Concept,
97 +** "codelist" for the class Codelist.
108 108  * The class-name can be omitted as it can be deduced from the VTL invocation. In particular, starting from the VTL class of the invoked artefact (e.g. dataset, component, identifier, measure, attribute, variable, valuedomain), which is known given the syntax of the invoking VTL operator{{footnote}}For the syntax of the VTL operators see the VTL Reference Manual{{/footnote}}, the SDMX class can be deduced from the mapping rules between VTL and SDMX (see the section "Mapping between VTL and SDMX" hereinafter){{footnote}}In case the invoked artefact is a VTL component, which can be invoked only within the invocation of a VTL data set (SDMX Dataflow), the specific SDMX class-name (e.g. Dimension, TimeDimension, Measure or DataAttribute) can be deduced from the data structure of the SDMX Dataflow, which the component belongs to.{{/footnote}}.
109 109  * If the agency-id is not specified, it is assumed by default equal to the agency-id of the TransformationScheme, UserDefinedOperatorScheme or RulesetScheme from which the artefact is invoked. For example, the agencyid can be omitted if it is the same as the invoking TransformationScheme and cannot be omitted if the artefact comes from another agency{{footnote}}If the Agency is composite (for example AgencyA.Dept1.Unit2), the agency is considered different even if only part of the composite name is different (for example AgencyA.Dept1.Unit3 is a different Agency than the previous one). Moreover the agency-id cannot be omitted in part (i.e., if a TransformationScheme owned by AgencyA.Dept1.Unit2 references an artefact coming from AgencyA.Dept1.Unit3, the specification of the agency-id becomes mandatory and must be complete, without omitting the possibly equal parts like AgencyA.Dept1){{/footnote}}. Take also into account that, according to the VTL consistency rules, the agency of the result of a Transformation must be the same as its TransformationScheme, therefore the agency-id can be omitted for all the results (left part of Transformation statements).
110 -* As for the maintainedobject-id, this is essential in some cases while in other cases it can be omitted: o if the referenced artefact is a Dataflow, which is a maintainable class, the maintainedobject-id is the dataflow-id and obviously cannot be omitted;
111 -** if the referenced artefact is a Dimension, TimeDimension, Measure,
112 -
113 -DataAttribute, which are not maintainable and belong to the DataStructure maintainable class, the maintainedobject-id is the dataStructure-id and can be omitted, given that these components are always invoked within the invocation of a Dataflow, whose dataStructure-id can be deduced from the SDMX structural definitions;
114 -
115 -*
100 +* As for the maintainedobject-id, this is essential in some cases while in other cases it can be omitted:
101 +** if the referenced artefact is a Dataflow, which is a maintainable class, the maintainedobject-id is the dataflow-id and obviously cannot be omitted;
102 +** if the referenced artefact is a Dimension, TimeDimension, Measure, DataAttribute, which are not maintainable and belong to the DataStructure maintainable class, the maintainedobject-id is the dataStructure-id and can be omitted, given that these components are always invoked within the invocation of a Dataflow, whose dataStructure-id can be deduced from the SDMX structural definitions;
116 116  ** if the referenced artefact is a Concept, which is not maintainable and belong to the ConceptScheme maintainable class, the maintained object is the conceptScheme-id and cannot be omitted;
117 117  ** if the referenced artefact is a Codelist, which is a maintainable class, the maintainedobject-id is the codelist-id and obviously cannot be omitted.
118 118  * When the maintainedobject-id is omitted, the maintainedobject-version is omitted too. When the maintainedobject-id is not omitted and the maintainedobject-version is omitted, the version 1.0 is assumed by default.
... ... @@ -123,65 +123,57 @@
123 123  
124 124  For example, the full formulation that uses the complete URN shown at the end of the previous paragraph:
125 125  
126 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DFR(1.0.0)' :=
113 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DFR(1.0.0)' :=
114 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF1(1.0.0)' +
115 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF2(1.0.0)'
127 127  
128 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF1(1.0.0)' +
129 -
130 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.Dataflow=AG:DF2(1.0.0)'
131 -
132 132  by omitting all the non-essential parts would become simply:
133 133  
134 -DFR := DF1 + DF2
119 +> DFR  : =  DF1 + DF2
135 135  
136 136  The references to the Codelists can be simplified similarly. For example, given the non-abbreviated reference to the Codelist AG:CL_FREQ(1.0.0), which is{{footnote}}Single quotes are needed because this reference is not a VTL regular name. 19 Single quotes are not needed in this case because CL_FREQ is a VTL regular name.{{/footnote}}:
137 137  
138 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.codelist.Codelist=AG:CL_FREQ(1.0.0)'
123 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.codelist.Codelist=AG:CL_FREQ(1.0.0)'
139 139  
140 140  if the Codelist is referenced from a RulesetScheme belonging to the agency AG, omitting all the optional parts, the abbreviated reference would become simply^^19^^:
141 141  
142 -CL_FREQ
127 +> CL_FREQ
143 143  
144 144  As for the references to the components, it can be enough to specify the componentId, given that the dataStructure-Id can be omitted. An example of non-abbreviated reference, if the data structure is DST1 and the component is SECTOR, is the following:
145 145  
146 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.DataStructure=AG:DST1(1.0.0).S
131 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.datastructure.DataStructure=AG:DST1(1.0.0).S ECTOR'
147 147  
148 -ECTOR'
149 -
150 150  The corresponding fully abbreviated reference, if made from a TransformationScheme belonging to AG, would become simply:
151 151  
152 -SECTOR
135 +> SECTOR
153 153  
154 154  For example, the Transformation for renaming the component SECTOR of the Dataflow DF1 into SEC can be written as{{footnote}}The result DFR(1.0.0) is be equal to DF1(1.0.0) save that the component SECTOR is called SEC{{/footnote}}:
155 155  
156 -'DFR(1.0.0)' := 'DF1(1.0.0)' [rename SECTOR to SEC]
139 +> 'DFR(1.0.0)' := 'DF1(1.0.0)' [rename SECTOR to SEC]
157 157  
158 158  In the references to the Concepts, which can exist for example in the definition of the VTL Rulesets, at least the conceptScheme-id and the concept-id must be specified.
159 159  
160 160  An example of non-abbreviated reference, if the conceptScheme-id is CS1 and the concept-id is SECTOR, is the following:
161 161  
162 -'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.conceptscheme.Concept=AG:CS1(1.0.0).SECTOR'
145 +> 'urn:sdmx:org.sdmx.infomodel.conceptscheme.Concept=AG:CS1(1.0.0).SECTOR'
163 163  
164 164  The corresponding fully abbreviated reference, if made from a RulesetScheme belonging to AG, would become simply:
165 165  
166 -CS1(1.0.0).SECTOR
149 +> CS1(1.0.0).SECTOR
167 167  
168 168  The Codes and in general all the Values can be written without any other specification, for example, the transformation to check if the values of the measures of the Dataflow DF1 are between 0 and 25000 can be written like follows:
169 169  
170 -'DFR(1.0.0)' := between ( 'DF1(1.0.0)', 0, 25000 )
153 +> 'DFR(1.0.0)' := between ( 'DF1(1.0.0)', 0, 25000 )
171 171  
172 172  The artefact (Component, Concept, Codelist …) which the Values are referred to can be deduced from the context in which the reference is made, taking also into account the VTL syntax. In the Transformation above, for example, the values 0 and 2500 are compared to the values of the measures of DF1(1.0.0).
173 173  
174 -1.
175 -11.
176 -111. User-defined alias
157 +=== 12.2.4 User-defined alias ===
177 177  
178 178  The third possibility for referencing SDMX artefacts from VTL statements is to use user-defined aliases not related to the SDMX URN of the artefact.
179 179  
180 180  This approach gives preference to the use of symbolic names for the SDMX artefacts. As a consequence, in the VTL code the referenced artefacts may become not directly intelligible by a human reader. In any case, the VTL aliases are associated to the SDMX URN through the VtlMappingScheme and VtlMapping classes. These classes provide for structured references to SDMX artefacts whatever kind of reference is used in VTL statements (URN, abbreviated URN or user-defined aliases).
181 181  
182 -1.
183 -11.
184 -111. References to SDMX artefacts from VTL Rulesets
163 +=== 12.2.5 References to SDMX artefacts from VTL Rulesets ===
185 185  
186 186  The VTL Rulesets allow defining sets of reusable Rules that can be applied by some VTL operators, like the ones for validation and hierarchical roll-up. A "Rule" consists in a relationship between Values belonging to some Value Domains or taken by some Variables, for example: (i) when the Country is USA then the Currency is USD; (ii) the Benelux is composed by Belgium, Luxembourg, Netherlands.
187 187  
... ... @@ -193,10 +193,10 @@
193 193  
194 194  In the body of the Rulesets, the Codes and in general all the Values can be written without any other specification, because the artefact, which the Values are referred (Codelist, Concept) to can be deduced from the Ruleset signature.
195 195  
196 -1.
197 -11. Mapping between SDMX and VTL artefacts
198 -111. When the mapping occurs
175 +== 12.3 Mapping between SDMX and VTL artefacts ==
199 199  
177 +=== 12.3.1. When the mapping occurs ===
178 +
200 200  The mapping methods between the VTL and SDMX object classes allow transforming a SDMX definition in a VTL one and vice-versa for the artefacts to be manipulated. It should be remembered that VTL programs (i.e. Transformation Schemes) are represented in SDMX through the TransformationScheme maintainable class which is composed of Transformations (nameable artefacts). Each Transformation assigns the outcome of the evaluation of a VTL expression to a result: the input operands of the expression and the result can be SDMX artefacts. Every time a SDMX object is referenced in a VTL Transformation as an input operand, there is the need to generate a VTL definition of the object, so that the VTL operations can take place. This can be made starting from the SDMX definition and applying a SDMX-VTL mapping method in the direction from SDMX to VTL. The possible mapping methods from SDMX to VTL are described in the following paragraphs and are conceived to allow the automatic deduction of the VTL definition of the object from the knowledge of the SDMX definition.
201 201  
202 202  In the opposite direction, every time an object calculated by means of VTL must be treated as a SDMX object (for example for exchanging it through SDMX), there is the need of a SDMX definition of the object, so that the SDMX operations can take place. The SDMX definition is needed for the VTL objects for which a SDMX use is envisaged{{footnote}}If a calculated artefact is persistent, it needs a persistent definition, i.e. a SDMX definition in a SDMX environment. In addition, possible calculated artefact that are not persistent may require a SDMX definition, for example when the result of a nonpersistent calculation is disseminated through SDMX tools (like an inquiry tool).{{/footnote}}.
... ... @@ -203,9 +203,7 @@
203 203  
204 204  The mapping methods from VTL to SDMX are described in the following paragraphs as well, however they do not allow the complete SDMX definition to be automatically deduced from the VTL definition, more than all because the former typically contains additional information in respect to the latter. For example, the definition of a SDMX DSD includes also some mandatory information not available in VTL (like the concept scheme to which the SDMX components refer, the ‘usage’ and ‘attributeRelationship’ for the DataAttributes and so on). Therefore the mapping methods from VTL to SDMX provide only a general guidance for generating SDMX definitions properly starting from the information available in VTL, independently of how the SDMX definition it is actually generated (manually, automatically or part and part).
205 205  
206 -1.
207 -11.
208 -111. General mapping of VTL and SDMX data structures
185 +=== 12.3.2 General mapping of VTL and SDMX data structures ===
209 209  
210 210  This section makes reference to the VTL "Model for data and their structure"{{footnote}}See the VTL 2.0 User Manual{{/footnote}} and the correspondent SDMX "Data Structure Definition"{{footnote}}See the SDMX Standards Section 2 – Information Model{{/footnote}}.
211 211  
... ... @@ -221,34 +221,31 @@
221 221  
222 222  The possible mapping options are described in more detail in the following sections.
223 223  
224 -1.
225 -11.
226 -111. Mapping from SDMX to VTL data structures
201 +=== 12.3.3 Mapping from SDMX to VTL data structures ===
227 227  
228 -**12.3.3.1 Basic Mapping**
203 +==== 12.3.3.1 Basic Mapping ====
229 229  
230 230  The main mapping method from SDMX to VTL is called **Basic **mapping. This is considered as the default mapping method and is applied unless a different method is specified through the VtlMappingScheme and VtlDataflowMapping classes.
231 231  
232 232  When transforming **from SDMX to VTL**, this method consists in leaving the components unchanged and maintaining their names and roles, according to the following table:
233 233  
234 -|**SDMX**|**VTL**
235 -|Dimension|(Simple) Identifier
236 -|TimeDimension|(Time) Identifier
237 -|Measure|Measure
238 -|DataAttribute|Attribute
209 +(% style="width:468.294px" %)
210 +|(% style="width:196px" %)**SDMX**|(% style="width:269px" %)**VTL**
211 +|(% style="width:196px" %)Dimension|(% style="width:269px" %)(Simple) Identifier
212 +|(% style="width:196px" %)TimeDimension|(% style="width:269px" %)(Time) Identifier
213 +|(% style="width:196px" %)Measure|(% style="width:269px" %)Measure
214 +|(% style="width:196px" %)DataAttribute|(% style="width:269px" %)Attribute
239 239  
240 240  The SDMX DataAttributes, in VTL they are all considered "at data point / observation level" (i.e. dependent on all the VTL Identifiers), because VTL does not have the SDMX AttributeRelationships, which defines the construct to which the DataAttribute is related (e.g. observation, dimension or set or group of dimensions, whole data set).
241 241  
242 242  With the Basic mapping, one SDMX observation^^27^^ generates one VTL data point.
243 243  
244 -**12.3.3.2 Pivot Mapping**
220 +==== 12.3.3.2 Pivot Mapping ====
245 245  
246 246  An alternative mapping method from SDMX to VTL is the **Pivot **mapping, which makes sense and is different from the Basic method only for the SDMX data structures that contain a Dimension that plays the role of measure dimension (like in SDMX 2.1) and just one Measure. Through this method, these structures can be mapped to multimeasure VTL data structures. Besides that, a user may choose to use any Dimension acting as a list of Measures (e.g., a Dimension with indicators), either by considering the “Measure” role of a Dimension, or at will using any coded Dimension. Of course, in SDMX 3.0, this can only work when only one Measure is defined in the DSD.
247 247  
248 -In SDMX 2.1 the MeasureDimension was a subclass of DimensionComponent like Dimension and TimeDimension. In the current SDMX version, this subclass does not exist anymore, however a Dimension can have the role of measure dimension (i.e. a Dimension that contributes to the identification of the measures). In SDMX 2.1 a DataStructure could have zero or one MeasureDimensions, in the current version of the standard, from zero to many Dimension may have the role of measure dimension. Hereinafter a Dimension that plays the role of measure dimension is referenced for simplicity as “MeasureDimension“, i.e. maintaining the capital letters and the courier font even if the MeasureDimension is not anymore a class in the SDMX Information Model of the current SDMX version. For the sake of simplicity, the description below considers just one Dimension having the role of MeasureDimension (i.e., the more simple and common case). Nevertheless, it maintains its validity also if in the DataStructure there are more dimension with the role of MeasureDimensions: in this case what is said about the MeasureDimension must be applied to the combination of all the
224 +In SDMX 2.1 the MeasureDimension was a subclass of DimensionComponent like Dimension and TimeDimension. In the current SDMX version, this subclass does not exist anymore, however a Dimension can have the role of measure dimension (i.e. a Dimension that contributes to the identification of the measures). In SDMX 2.1 a DataStructure could have zero or one MeasureDimensions, in the current version of the standard, from zero to many Dimension may have the role of measure dimension. Hereinafter a Dimension that plays the role of measure dimension is referenced for simplicity as “MeasureDimension“, i.e. maintaining the capital letters and the courier font even if the MeasureDimension is not anymore a class in the SDMX Information Model of the current SDMX version. For the sake of simplicity, the description below considers just one Dimension having the role of MeasureDimension (i.e., the more simple and common case). Nevertheless, it maintains its validity also if in the DataStructure there are more dimension with the role of MeasureDimensions: in this case what is said about the MeasureDimension must be applied to the combination of all the MeasureDimensions considered as a joint variable{{footnote}}E.g., if in the data structure there exist 3 Dimensions C,D,E having the role of MeasureDimension, they should be considered as a joint MeasureDimension Z=(C,D,E); therefore when the description says “each possible value Cj of the MeasureDimension …” it means “each possible combination of values (Cj, Dk, Ew) of the joint MeasureDimension Z=(C,D,E)”.{{/footnote}}.
249 249  
250 -MeasureDimensions considered as a joint variable{{footnote}}E.g., if in the data structure there exist 3 Dimensions C,D,E having the role of MeasureDimension, they should be considered as a joint MeasureDimension Z=(C,D,E); therefore when the description says “each possible value Cj of the MeasureDimension …” it means “each possible combination of values (Cj, Dk, Ew) of the joint MeasureDimension Z=(C,D,E)”.{{/footnote}}.
251 -
252 252  Among other things, the Pivot method provides also backward compatibility with the SDMX 2.1 data structures that contained a MeasureDimension.
253 253  
254 254  If applied to SDMX structures that do not contain any MeasureDimension, this method behaves like the Basic mapping (see the previous paragraph).
... ... @@ -261,18 +261,19 @@
261 261  * The SDMX Measure is not mapped to VTL as well (it disappears in the VTL Data Structure);
262 262  * An SDMX DataAttribute is mapped in different ways according to its AttributeRelationship:
263 263  ** If, according to the SDMX AttributeRelationship, the values of the DataAttribute do not depend on the values of the MeasureDimension, the SDMX DataAttribute becomes a VTL Attribute having the same name. This happens if the AttributeRelationship is not specified (i.e. the DataAttribute does not depend on any DimensionComponent and therefore is at data set level), or if it refers to a set (or a group) of dimensions which does not include the MeasureDimension;
264 -** Otherwise, if, according to the SDMX AttributeRelationship, the values of the DataAttribute depend on the MeasureDimension, the SDMX DataAttribute is mapped to one VTL Attribute for each possible Code of the SDMX MeasureDimension. By default, the names of the VTL Attributes are obtained by concatenating the name of the SDMX DataAttribute and the names of the correspondent Code of the MeasureDimension separated by underscore. For example, if the SDMX DataAttribute is named DA and the possible Codes of the SDMX MeasureDimension are named C1, C2, …, Cn, then the corresponding VTL Attributes will be named DA_C1, DA_C2, …, DA_Cn (if different names are desired, they can be achieved afterwards by renaming the Attributes through VTL operators). o Like in the Basic mapping, the resulting VTL Attributes are considered as dependent on all the VTL identifiers (i.e. "at data point / observation level"), because VTL does not have the SDMX notion of Attribute Relationship.
238 +** Otherwise, if, according to the SDMX AttributeRelationship, the values of the DataAttribute depend on the MeasureDimension, the SDMX DataAttribute is mapped to one VTL Attribute for each possible Code of the SDMX MeasureDimension. By default, the names of the VTL Attributes are obtained by concatenating the name of the SDMX DataAttribute and the names of the correspondent Code of the MeasureDimension separated by underscore. For example, if the SDMX DataAttribute is named DA and the possible Codes of the SDMX MeasureDimension are named C1, C2, …, Cn, then the corresponding VTL Attributes will be named DA_C1, DA_C2, …, DA_Cn (if different names are desired, they can be achieved afterwards by renaming the Attributes through VTL operators).
239 +** Like in the Basic mapping, the resulting VTL Attributes are considered as dependent on all the VTL identifiers (i.e. "at data point / observation level"), because VTL does not have the SDMX notion of Attribute Relationship.
265 265  
266 266  The summary mapping table of the "pivot" mapping from SDMX to VTL for the SDMX data structures that contain a MeasureDimension is the following:
267 267  
268 -|**SDMX**|**VTL**
269 -|Dimension|(Simple) Identifier
270 -|TimeDimension|(Time) Identifier
271 -|MeasureDimension & one Measure|One Measure for each Code of the SDMX MeasureDimension
272 -|DataAttribute not depending on the MeasureDimension|Attribute
273 -|DataAttribute depending on the MeasureDimension|(((
243 +(% style="width:739.294px" %)
244 +|(% style="width:335px" %)**SDMX**|(% style="width:400px" %)**VTL**
245 +|(% style="width:335px" %)Dimension|(% style="width:400px" %)(Simple) Identifier
246 +|(% style="width:335px" %)TimeDimension|(% style="width:400px" %)(Time) Identifier
247 +|(% style="width:335px" %)MeasureDimension & one Measure|(% style="width:400px" %)One Measure for each Code of the SDMX MeasureDimension
248 +|(% style="width:335px" %)DataAttribute not depending on the MeasureDimension|(% style="width:400px" %)Attribute
249 +|(% style="width:335px" %)DataAttribute depending on the MeasureDimension|(% style="width:400px" %)(((
274 274  One Attribute for each Code of the
275 -
276 276  SDMX MeasureDimension
277 277  )))
278 278  
... ... @@ -285,13 +285,10 @@
285 285  
286 286  Identifiers, (time) Identifier and Attributes.
287 287  
288 -* The value of the Measure of the SDMX observation belonging to the set above and having MeasureDimension=Cj becomes the value of the VTL Measure
289 -
290 -Cj
291 -
263 +* The value of the Measure of the SDMX observation belonging to the set above and having MeasureDimension=Cj becomes the value of the VTL Measure Cj
292 292  * For the SDMX DataAttributes depending on the MeasureDimension, the value of the DataAttribute DA of the SDMX observation belonging to the set above and having MeasureDimension=Cj becomes the value of the VTL Attribute DA_Cj
293 293  
294 -**12.3.3.3 From SDMX DataAttributes to VTL Measures**
266 +==== 12.3.3.3 From SDMX DataAttributes to VTL Measures ====
295 295  
296 296  * In some cases, it may happen that the DataAttributes of the SDMX DataStructure need to be managed as Measures in VTL. Therefore, a variant of both the methods above consists in transforming all the SDMX DataAttributes in VTL Measures. When DataAttributes are converted to Measures, the two methods above are called Basic_A2M and Pivot_A2M (the suffix "A2M" stands for Attributes to Measures). Obviously, the resulting VTL data structure is, in general, multi-measure and does not contain
297 297  
... ... @@ -301,11 +301,9 @@
301 301  
302 302  Proper VTL features allow changing the role of specific attributes even after the SDMX to VTL mapping: they can be useful when only some of the DataAttributes need to be managed as VTL Measures.
303 303  
304 -1.
305 -11.
306 -111. Mapping from VTL to SDMX data structures
276 +=== 12.3.4 Mapping from VTL to SDMX data structures ===
307 307  
308 -**12.3.4.1 Basic Mapping**
278 +==== 12.3.4.1 Basic Mapping ====
309 309  
310 310  The main mapping method **from VTL to SDMX** is called **Basic **mapping as well.
311 311  
... ... @@ -329,7 +329,7 @@
329 329  
330 330  As said, the resulting SDMX definitions must be compliant with the SDMX consistency rules. For example, the SDMX DSD must have the AttributeRelationship for the DataAttributes, which does not exist in VTL.
331 331  
332 -**12.3.4.2 Unpivot Mapping**
302 +==== 12.3.4.2 Unpivot Mapping ====
333 333  
334 334  An alternative mapping method from VTL to SDMX is the **Unpivot **mapping.
335 335  
... ... @@ -365,7 +365,7 @@
365 365  
366 366  In any case, the resulting SDMX definitions must be compliant with the SDMX consistency rules. For example, the possible Codes of the SDMX MeasureDimension need to be listed in a SDMX Codelist, with proper id, agency and version; moreover, the SDMX DSD must have the AttributeRelationship for the DataAttributes, which does not exist in VTL.
367 367  
368 -**12.3.4.3 From VTL Measures to SDMX Data Attributes**
338 +==== 12.3.4.3 From VTL Measures to SDMX Data Attributes ====
369 369  
370 370  More than all for the multi-measure VTL structures (having more than one Measure Component), it may happen that the Measures of the VTL Data Structure need to be managed as DataAttributes in SDMX. Therefore, a third mapping method consists in transforming some VTL measures in a corresponding SDMX Measures and all the other VTL Measures in SDMX DataAttributes. This method is called M2A (“M2A” stands for “Measures to DataAttributes”).
371 371  
... ... @@ -382,9 +382,7 @@
382 382  
383 383  Even in this case, the resulting SDMX definitions must be compliant with the SDMX consistency rules. For example, the SDMX DSD must have the attributeRelationship for the DataAttributes, which does not exist in VTL.
384 384  
385 -1.
386 -11.
387 -111. Declaration of the mapping methods between data structures
355 +=== 12.3.5 Declaration of the mapping methods between data structures ===
388 388  
389 389  In order to define and understand properly VTL Transformations, the applied mapping methods must be specified in the SDMX structural metadata. If the default mapping method (Basic) is applied, no specification is needed.
390 390  
... ... @@ -394,14 +394,10 @@
394 394  
395 395  The VtlMappingScheme is a container for zero or more VtlDataflowMapping (it may contain also mappings towards artefacts other than dataflows).
396 396  
397 -1.
398 -11.
399 -111. Mapping dataflow subsets to distinct VTL Data Sets
365 +=== 12.3.6 Mapping dataflow subsets to distinct VTL Data Sets ===
400 400  
401 -Until now it has been assumed to map one SMDX Dataflow to one VTL Data Set and vice-versa. This mapping one-to-one is not mandatory according to VTL because a VTL Data Set is meant to be a set of observations (data points) on a logical plane, having the same logical data structure and the same general meaning, independently of the possible physical representation or storage (see VTL 2.0 User Manual page 24), therefore a SDMX Dataflow can be seen either as a unique set of data observations
367 +Until now it has been assumed to map one SMDX Dataflow to one VTL Data Set and vice-versa. This mapping one-to-one is not mandatory according to VTL because a VTL Data Set is meant to be a set of observations (data points) on a logical plane, having the same logical data structure and the same general meaning, independently of the possible physical representation or storage (see VTL 2.0 User Manual page 24), therefore a SDMX Dataflow can be seen either as a unique set of data observations (corresponding to one VTL Data Set) or as the union of many sets of data observations (each one corresponding to a distinct VTL Data Set).
402 402  
403 -(corresponding to one VTL Data Set) or as the union of many sets of data observations (each one corresponding to a distinct VTL Data Set).
404 -
405 405  As a matter of fact, in some cases it can be useful to define VTL operations involving definite parts of a SDMX Dataflow instead than the whole.{{footnote}}A typical example of this kind is the validation, and more in general the manipulation, of individual time series belonging to the same Dataflow, identifiable through the DimensionComponents of the Dataflow except the TimeDimension. The coding of these kind of operations might be simplified by mapping distinct time series (i.e. different parts of a SDMX Dataflow) to distinct VTL Data Sets.{{/footnote}}
406 406  
407 407  Therefore, in order to make the coding of VTL operations simpler when applied on parts of SDMX Dataflows, it is allowed to map distinct parts of a SDMX Dataflow to distinct VTL Data Sets according to the following rules and conventions. This kind of mapping is possible both from SDMX to VTL and from VTL to SDMX, as better explained below.{{footnote}}Please note that this kind of mapping is only an option at disposal of the definer of VTL Transformations; in fact it remains always possible to manipulate the needed parts of SDMX Dataflows by means of VTL operators (e.g. “sub”, “filter”, “calc”, “union” …), maintaining a mapping one-to-one between SDMX Dataflows and VTL Data Sets.{{/footnote}}
... ... @@ -494,13 +494,10 @@
494 494  Some examples follow, for some specific values of INDICATOR and COUNTRY:
495 495  
496 496  ‘DF2(1.0.0)/GDPPERCAPITA.USA’ <- expression11; ‘DF2(1.0.0)/GDPPERCAPITA.CANADA’ <- expression12;
497 -
498 498  … … …
499 499  
500 500  ‘DF2(1.0.0)/POPGROWTH.USA’ <- expression21;
501 -
502 502  ‘DF2(1.0.0)/POPGROWTH.CANADA’ <- expression22;
503 -
504 504  … … …
505 505  
506 506  As said, it is assumed that these VTL derived Data Sets have the TIME_PERIOD as the only identifier. In the mapping from VTL to SMDX, the Dimensions INDICATOR and COUNTRY are added to the VTL data structure on order to obtain the SDMX one, with the following values respectively:
... ... @@ -507,13 +507,9 @@
507 507  
508 508  VTL dataset   INDICATOR value COUNTRY value
509 509  
510 -
511 511  ‘DF2(1.0.0)/GDPPERCAPITA.USA’ GDPPERCAPITA USA
512 -
513 513  ‘DF2(1.0.0)/GDPPERCAPITA.CANADA’ GDPPERCAPITA CANADA … … …
514 -
515 515  ‘DF2(1.0.0)/POPGROWTH.USA’  POPGROWTH USA
516 -
517 517  ‘DF2(1.0.0)/POPGROWTH.CANADA’ POPGROWTH CANADA
518 518  
519 519  … … …
... ... @@ -521,25 +521,15 @@
521 521  It should be noted that the application of this many-to-one mapping from VTL to SDMX is equivalent to an appropriate sequence of VTL Transformations. These use the VTL operator “calc” to add the proper VTL identifiers (in the example, INDICATOR and COUNTRY) and to assign to them the proper values and the operator “union” in order to obtain the final VTL dataset (in the example DF2(1.0.0)), that can be mapped oneto-one to the homonymous SDMX Dataflow. Following the same example, these VTL Transformations would be:
522 522  
523 523  DF2bis_GDPPERCAPITA_USA := ‘DF2(1.0.0)/GDPPERCAPITA.USA’ [calc identifier INDICATOR := ”GDPPERCAPITA”, identifier COUNTRY := ”USA”];
524 -
525 525  DF2bis_GDPPERCAPITA_CANADA := ‘DF2(1.0.0)/GDPPERCAPITA.CANADA’ [calc identifier INDICATOR:=”GDPPERCAPITA”, identifier COUNTRY:=”CANADA”]; … … …
526 -
527 527  DF2bis_POPGROWTH_USA := ‘DF2(1.0.0)/POPGROWTH.USA’
528 -
529 529  [calc identifier INDICATOR := ”POPGROWTH”, identifier COUNTRY := ”USA”];
530 -
531 531  DF2bis_POPGROWTH_CANADA’ := ‘DF2(1.0.0)/POPGROWTH.CANADA’ [calc identifier INDICATOR := ”POPGROWTH”, identifier COUNTRY := ”CANADA”]; … … …
532 -
533 533  DF2(1.0) <- UNION  (DF2bis_GDPPERCAPITA_USA’,
534 -
535 535  DF2bis_GDPPERCAPITA_CANADA’,
536 -
537 537  … ,
538 -
539 539  DF2bis_POPGROWTH_USA’,
540 -
541 541  DF2bis_POPGROWTH_CANADA’
542 -
543 543  …);
544 544  
545 545  In other words, starting from the datasets explicitly calculated through VTL (in the example ‘DF2(1.0)/GDPPERCAPITA.USA’ and so on), the first step consists in calculating other (non-persistent) VTL datasets (in the example DF2bis_GDPPERCAPITA_USA and so on) by adding the identifiers INDICATOR and COUNTRY with the desired values (//INDICATORvalue// and //COUNTRYvalue)//. Finally, all these non-persistent Data Sets are united and give the final result DF2(1.0){{footnote}}The result is persistent in this example but it can be also non persistent if needed.{{/footnote}}, which can be mapped one-to-one to the homonymous SDMX Dataflow having the dimension components TIME_PERIOD, INDICATOR and COUNTRY.
... ... @@ -548,9 +548,7 @@
548 548  
549 549  It is worth noting that in the direction from VTL to SDMX it is mandatory to specify the value for every Dimension on which the mapping is based (in other word, in the name of the calculated VTL dataset is not possible to omit the value of some of the Dimensions).
550 550  
551 -1.
552 -11.
553 -111. Mapping variables and value domains between VTL and SDMX
498 +=== 12.3.7 Mapping variables and value domains between VTL and SDMX ===
554 554  
555 555  With reference to the VTL “model for Variables and Value domains”, the following additional mappings have to be considered:
556 556  
... ... @@ -559,7 +559,6 @@
559 559  |**Represented Variable**|**Concept** with a definite Representation
560 560  |**Value Domain**|(((
561 561  **Representation** (see the Structure
562 -
563 563  Pattern in the Base Package)
564 564  )))
565 565  |**Enumerated Value Domain / Code List**|**Codelist**
... ... @@ -566,7 +566,6 @@
566 566  |**Code**|**Code** (for enumerated DimensionComponent, Measure, DataAttribute)
567 567  |**Described Value Domain**|(((
568 568  non-enumerated** Representation**
569 -
570 570  (having Facets / ExtendedFacets, see the Structure Pattern in the Base Package)
571 571  )))
572 572  |**Value**|Although this abstraction exists in SDMX, it does not have an explicit definition and correspond to a **Code** of a Codelist (for enumerated Representations) or
... ... @@ -590,10 +590,10 @@
590 590  
591 591  It remains up to the SDMX-VTL definer also the assurance of the consistency between a VTL Ruleset defined on Variables and the SDMX Components on which the Ruleset is applied. In fact, a VTL Ruleset is expressed by means of the values of the Variables (i.e. SDMX Concepts), i.e. assuming definite representations for them (e.g. ISOalpha-3 for country). If the Ruleset is applied to SDMX Components that have the same name of the Concept they refer to but different representations (e.g. ISO-alpha-2 for country), the Ruleset cannot work properly.
592 592  
593 -1.
594 -11. Mapping between SDMX and VTL Data Types
595 -111. VTL Data types
536 +== 12.4 Mapping between SDMX and VTL Data Types ==
596 596  
538 +=== 12.4.1 VTL Data types ===
539 +
597 597  According to the VTL User Guide the possible operations in VTL depend on the data types of the artefacts. For example, numbers can be multiplied but text strings cannot. In the VTL Transformations, the compliance between the operators and the data types of their operands is statically checked, i.e., violations result in compile-time errors.
598 598  
599 599  The VTL data types are sub-divided in scalar types (like integers, strings, etc.), which are the types of the scalar values, and compound types (like Data Sets, Components, Rulesets, etc.), which are the types of the compound structures. See below the diagram of the VTL data types, taken from the VTL User Manual:
... ... @@ -600,17 +600,15 @@
600 600  
601 601  [[image:1750067055028-964.png]]
602 602  
603 -==== Figure 22 – VTL Data Types ====
546 +**Figure 22 – VTL Data Types**
604 604  
605 605  The VTL scalar types are in turn subdivided in basic scalar types, which are elementary (not defined in term of other data types) and Value Domain and Set scalar types, which are defined in terms of the basic scalar types.
606 606  
607 607  The VTL basic scalar types are listed below and follow a hierarchical structure in terms of supersets/subsets (e.g. "scalar" is the superset of all the basic scalar types):
608 608  
609 -==== Figure 23 – VTL Basic Scalar Types ====
552 +**Figure 23 – VTL Basic Scalar Types**
610 610  
611 -1.
612 -11.
613 -111. VTL basic scalar types and SDMX data types
554 +=== 12.4.2 VTL basic scalar types and SDMX data types ===
614 614  
615 615  The VTL assumes that a basic scalar type has a unique internal representation and can have more external representations.
616 616  
... ... @@ -628,9 +628,7 @@
628 628  
629 629  The opposite conversion, i.e. from VTL to SDMX, happens when a VTL result, i.e. a VTL Data Set output of a Transformation, must become a SDMX artefact (or part of it). The values of the VTL result must be converted into the desired (SDMX) external representations (data types) of the SDMX artefact.
630 630  
631 -1.
632 -11.
633 -111. Mapping SDMX data types to VTL basic scalar types
572 +=== 12.4.3 Mapping SDMX data types to VTL basic scalar types ===
634 634  
635 635  The following table describes the default mapping for converting from the SDMX data types to the VTL basic scalar types.
636 636  
... ... @@ -637,7 +637,6 @@
637 637  |SDMX data type (BasicComponentDataType)|Default VTL basic scalar type
638 638  |(((
639 639  String
640 -
641 641  (string allowing any character)
642 642  )))|string
643 643  |(((
... ... @@ -647,7 +647,6 @@
647 647  )))|string
648 648  |(((
649 649  AlphaNumeric
650 -
651 651  (string which only allows A-z and 0-9)
652 652  )))|string
653 653  |(((
... ... @@ -657,89 +657,70 @@
657 657  )))|string
658 658  |(((
659 659  BigInteger
660 -
661 661  (corresponds to XML Schema xs:integer datatype; infinite set of integer values)
662 662  )))|integer
663 663  |(((
664 664  Integer
665 -
666 666  (corresponds to XML Schema xs:int datatype; between -2147483648 and +2147483647
667 -
668 668  (inclusive))
669 669  )))|integer
670 670  |(((
671 671  Long
672 -
673 673  (corresponds to XML Schema xs:long datatype; between -9223372036854775808 and
674 -
675 675  +9223372036854775807 (inclusive))
676 676  )))|integer
677 677  |(((
678 678  Short
679 -
680 680  (corresponds to XML Schema xs:short datatype; between -32768 and -32767 (inclusive))
681 681  )))|integer
682 682  |Decimal (corresponds to XML Schema xs:decimal datatype; subset of real numbers that can be represented as decimals)|number
683 683  |(((
684 684  Float
685 -
686 686  (corresponds to XML Schema xs:float datatype; patterned after the IEEE single-precision 32-bit floating point type)
687 687  )))|number
688 688  |(((
689 689  Double
690 -
691 691  (corresponds to XML Schema xs:double datatype; patterned after the IEEE double-precision 64-bit floating point type)
692 692  )))|number
693 693  |(((
694 694  Boolean
695 -
696 696  (corresponds to the XML Schema xs:boolean datatype; support the mathematical concept of
697 -
698 698  binary-valued logic: {true, false})
699 699  )))|boolean
700 700  |(((
701 701  URI
702 -
703 703  (corresponds to the XML Schema xs:anyURI; absolute or relative Uniform Resource Identifier Reference)
704 704  )))|string
705 705  |(((
706 706  Count
707 -
708 708  (an integer following a sequential pattern, increasing by 1 for each occurrence)
709 709  )))|integer
710 710  |(((
711 711  InclusiveValueRange
712 -
713 713  (decimal number within a closed interval, whose bounds are specified in the SDMX representation by the facets minValue and maxValue)
714 714  )))|number
715 715  |(((
716 716  ExclusiveValueRange
717 -
718 718  (decimal number within an open interval, whose bounds are specified in the SDMX representation by the facets minValue and maxValue)
719 719  )))|number
720 720  |(((
721 721  Incremental
722 -
723 723  (decimal number the increased by a specific interval (defined by the interval facet), which is typically enforced outside of the XML validation)
724 724  )))|number
725 725  |(((
726 726  ObservationalTimePeriod
727 -
728 728  (superset of StandardTimePeriod and TimeRange)
729 729  )))|time
730 730  |(((
731 731  StandardTimePeriod
732 -
733 733  (superset of BasicTimePeriod and ReportingTimePeriod)
734 734  )))|time
735 735  |(((
736 736  BasicTimePeriod
737 -
738 738  (superset of GregorianTimePeriod and DateTime)
739 739  )))|date
740 740  |(((
741 741  GregorianTimePeriod
742 -
743 743  (superset of GregorianYear, GregorianYearMonth, and GregorianDay)
744 744  )))|date
745 745  |GregorianYear (YYYY)|date
... ... @@ -747,32 +747,26 @@
747 747  |GregorianDay (YYYY-MM-DD)|date
748 748  |(((
749 749  ReportingTimePeriod
750 -
751 751  (superset of RepostingYear, ReportingSemester, ReportingTrimester, ReportingQuarter, ReportingMonth, ReportingWeek, ReportingDay)
752 752  )))|time_period
753 753  |(((
754 754  ReportingYear
755 -
756 756  (YYYY-A1 – 1 year period)
757 757  )))|time_period
758 758  |(((
759 759  ReportingSemester
760 -
761 761  (YYYY-Ss – 6 month period)
762 762  )))|time_period
763 763  |(((
764 764  ReportingTrimester
765 -
766 766  (YYYY-Tt – 4 month period)
767 767  )))|time_period
768 768  |(((
769 769  ReportingQuarter
770 -
771 771  (YYYY-Qq – 3 month period)
772 772  )))|time_period
773 773  |(((
774 774  ReportingMonth
775 -
776 776  (YYYY-Mmm – 1 month period)
777 777  )))|time_period
778 778  |ReportingWeek|time_period
... ... @@ -779,42 +779,34 @@
779 779  | (YYYY-Www – 7 day period; following ISO 8601 definition of a week in a year)|
780 780  |(((
781 781  ReportingDay
782 -
783 783  (YYYY-Dddd – 1 day period)
784 784  )))|time_period
785 785  |(((
786 786  DateTime
787 -
788 788  (YYYY-MM-DDThh:mm:ss)
789 789  )))|date
790 790  |(((
791 791  TimeRange
792 -
793 793  (YYYY-MM-DD(Thh:mm:ss)?/<duration>)
794 794  )))|time
795 795  |(((
796 796  Month
797 -
798 798  (~-~-MM; speicifies a month independent of a year; e.g. February is black history month in the United States)
799 799  )))|string
800 800  |(((
801 801  MonthDay
802 -
803 803  (~-~-MM-DD; specifies a day within a month independent of a year; e.g. Christmas is December 25^^th^^; used to specify reporting year start day)
804 804  )))|string
805 805  |(((
806 806  Day
807 -
808 808  (~-~--DD; specifies a day independent of a month or year; e.g. the 15^^th^^ is payday)
809 809  )))|string
810 810  |(((
811 811  Time
812 -
813 813  (hh:mm:ss; time independent of a date; e.g. coffee break is at 10:00 AM)
814 814  )))|string
815 815  |(((
816 816  Duration
817 -
818 818  (corresponds to XML Schema xs:duration datatype)
819 819  )))|duration
820 820  |XHTML|Metadata type – not applicable
... ... @@ -822,27 +822,20 @@
822 822  |IdentifiableReference|Metadata type – not applicable
823 823  |DataSetReference|Metadata type – not applicable
824 824  
825 -додол
729 +**Figure 14 – Mappings from SDMX data types to VTL Basic Scalar Types**
826 826  
827 -==== Figure 14 – Mappings from SDMX data types to VTL Basic Scalar Types ====
828 -
829 829  When VTL takes in input SDMX artefacts, it is assumed that a type conversion according to the table above always happens. In case a different VTL basic scalar type is desired, it can be achieved in the VTL program taking in input the default VTL basic scalar type above and applying to it the VTL type conversion features (see the implicit and explicit type conversion and the "cast" operator in the VTL Reference Manual).
830 830  
831 -1.
832 -11.
833 -111. Mapping VTL basic scalar types to SDMX data types
733 +=== 12.4.4 Mapping VTL basic scalar types to SDMX data types ===
834 834  
835 835  The following table describes the default conversion from the VTL basic scalar types to the SDMX data types .
836 836  
837 837  |(((
838 838  VTL basic
839 -
840 840  scalar type
841 841  )))|(((
842 842  Default SDMX data type
843 -
844 844  (BasicComponentDataType
845 -
846 846  )
847 847  )))|Default output format
848 848  |String|String|Like XML (xs:string)
... ... @@ -852,17 +852,15 @@
852 852  |Time|StandardTimePeriod|<date>/<date> (as defined above)
853 853  |time_period|(((
854 854  ReportingTimePeriod
855 -
856 856  (StandardReportingPeriod)
857 857  )))|(((
858 858   YYYY-Pppp
859 -
860 860  (according to SDMX )
861 861  )))
862 862  |Duration|Duration|Like XML (xs:duration) PnYnMnDTnHnMnS
863 863  |Boolean|Boolean|Like XML (xs:boolean) with the values "true" or "false"
864 864  
865 -==== Figure 14 – Mappings from SDMX data types to VTL Basic Scalar Types ====
760 +**Figure 14 – Mappings from SDMX data types to VTL Basic Scalar Types**
866 866  
867 867  In case a different default conversion is desired, it can be achieved through the CustomTypeScheme and CustomType artefacts (see also the section
868 868  
... ... @@ -920,17 +920,13 @@
920 920  
921 921  The default conversion, either standard or customized, can be used to deduce automatically the representation of the components of the result of a VTL Transformation. In alternative, the representation of the resulting SDMX Dataflow can be given explicitly by providing its DataStructureDefinition. In other words, the representation specified in the DSD, if available, overrides any default conversion{{footnote}}The representation given in the DSD should obviously be compatible with the VTL data type.{{/footnote}}.
922 922  
923 -1.
924 -11.
925 -111. Null Values
818 +=== 12.4.3 Null Values ===
926 926  
927 927  In the conversions from SDMX to VTL it is assumed by default that a missing value in SDMX becomes a NULL in VTL. After the conversion, the NULLs can be manipulated through the proper VTL operators.
928 928  
929 929  On the other side, the VTL programs can produce in output NULL values for Measures and Attributes (Null values are not allowed in the Identifiers). In the conversion from VTL to SDMX, it is assumed that a NULL in VTL becomes a missing value in SDMX. In the conversion from VTL to SDMX, the default assumption can be overridden, separately for each VTL basic scalar type, by specifying which the value that represents the NULL in SDMX is. This can be specified in the attribute "nullValue" of the CustomType artefact (see also the section Transformations and Expressions of the SDMX information model). A CustomType belongs to a CustomTypeScheme, which can be referenced by one or more TransformationScheme (i.e. VTL programs). The overriding assumption is applied for all the SDMX Dataflows calculated in the TransformationScheme.
930 930  
931 -1.
932 -11.
933 -111. Format of the literals used in VTL Transformations
824 +=== 12.4.5 Format of the literals used in VTL Transformations ===
934 934  
935 935  The VTL programs can contain literals, i.e. specific values of certain data types written directly in the VTL definitions or expressions. The VTL does not prescribe a specific format for the literals and leave the specific VTL systems and the definers of VTL Transformations free of using their preferred formats.
936 936  
... ... @@ -944,7 +944,6 @@
944 944  
945 945  In case a literal is operand of a VTL Cast operation, the format specified in the Cast overrides all the possible otherwise specified formats.
946 946  
947 -
948 948  ----
949 949  
950 950  {{putFootnotes/}}