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US Army Corps of Engineers BUILDING STRONG ® Local Data Requirements and Definitions USACE SDSFIE Training Prerequisites: Creating a Data Dictionary for Your Local Data
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BUILDING STRONG ® Video sequence 2 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Objectives Understanding “source” and “target” terminology Understanding what is a valid SDSFIE element Understanding how to validate and refine local requirements in a Source Data Dictionary Understanding where to obtain the definitions to populate a Source Data Dictionary Understanding how to develop a geodatabase consistent with the final Source Data Dictionary 3 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® TERMINOLOGY: “SOURCE” AND “TARGET 4 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® “Source” and “Target” “source” = current or “as-is” condition of your local data, or local geodatabase schema “target” = future or “to-be” condition of your local data, or local SDSFIE Adaptation schema 5 of 24 from Source to Target “Source data” “Source data dictionary” “Source geodatabase” “Source schema” “Target data” “Target data dictionary” “Target geodatabase” “Target schema” or “Adaptation schema”
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BUILDING STRONG ® VALID ELEMENT DEFINITIONS IN THE SDSFIE STANDARD 6 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® SDSFIE Element Uniqueness: Names and Definitions Every SDSFIE element has a specific name and one unique definition Definitions of SDSFIE elements must be unique in meaning; semantic overlap must be minimized No two SDSFIE elements of same type (e.g., feature type) can have same name, but different definitions No two SDSFIE elements with different names can have the same definition. ► Generally, no renaming in USACE Adaptations ► Implementation exceptions are provided; in USACE adaptations, the use of an alias is allowable but must be justified 7 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Valid SDSFIE Elements: Definitions Relevant rules relative to SDSFIE elements that already exist, and adaptation extenstions: Rule 4-12: Extended feature types must be logically unique, with non-duplicate names Rule 4-14: Extended attributes may not have duplicative or conflicting definitions Section 4.2: “No SDSFIE Adaptation can change the definition or data type of an existing element.” 8 of 24 *Guidance for the Adaptation of SDSFIE 3.0, DISDIG, Version 1.0, 11 May 2011
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BUILDING STRONG ® Implications of SDSFIE Element Name and Definiton Policy For the purposes of developing your data dictionary, implement this guidance and these rules as follows: Do not address definitional conflicts with 3.1 model elements at this time. (That will be done later.) Address definitional conflicts among your high-level data elements (i.e., feature classes and object tables) Focus on identifying and resolving any potential conflicts involving your non-standard (custom) high-level data elements 9 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® VALIDATING LOCAL REQUIREMENTS IN YOUR DRAFT DATA DICTIONARY 10 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Validating Local Requirements in your Data Dictionary Steps for reviewing the local requirements, as expressed in your draft data dictionary: Review all elements to verify they are required Flag any element that can be excluded Flag any element that is questionable with respect to inclusion criteria Identify additional requirements 11 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® WHERE TO OBTAIN ELEMENT DEFINITIONS TO POPULATE YOUR DATA DICTIONARY 12 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Element Definitions Missing from the Data Dictionary have been Highlighted 13 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Definitions Sources for Elements from a “Prior Release” Elements in your local geodatabase may have originated in a prior release of the standard, e.g., SDSFIE 2.6 or SDSFIE 3.0 Gold With the exception of domain values (aka enumerants), SDSFIE 2.6 Elements are all lowercase and use underscores, e.g., ► soil_sample_point (a 2.6 feature class) ► samp_typ_d (a 2.6 attribute) ► d_smpmeth (a 2.6 domain) ► VIBRACORE (a 2.6 domain value) 14 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Obtaining Definitions for Elements from a “Prior Release” 3.0 element definitions are already in your data dictionary if you followed steps in Video 4. If there are only a very few 2.6 and/or 3.0 feature classes and/or object tables: ► use the website’s Browse interface to obtain definitions 15 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Using the Browse Interface to Obtain Definitions 16 of 24 Log in at sdsfieonline.org sdsfieonline.org Go to the Models & Workflows page Select the data model ► Click SDSFIE Gold to expand ► Click SDSFIE 2.61 - Retired to select that data model Scroll down in the Model Elements view to find and select the feature type or object table for which you need the definition Highlight and copy the required definition
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BUILDING STRONG ® Obtaining Definitions for Elements from a “Prior Release” If you have many 2.6 and/or 3.0 feature classes and/or object tables: ► download the 2.6 or 3.0 Gold workbook model to obtain definitions; these can be found on USACE page of the sdsfieonline.org website: http://www.sdsfieonline.org/PublicPages/Branches/Corps.aspx 17 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Definition Sources for Elements with non-SDSFIE origin For those elements of your local data that were not based on a prior release of the SDSFIE, these sources may be helpful in obtaining definitions: Metadata for feature classes and object tables may contain required definitions, including attribute definitions ► If metadata is stored in ArcCatalog metadata model, then access definition through the ArcCatlog’s Description view ► Metadata may be stored in documents outside of the geodatabase and/or ArcCatalog, e.g., text, html, or PDF format ► Other locations (e.g., a domain-specific data dictionary, if you built feature classes from that schema) 18 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Communications within Data Owners and Others For definitions still missing, ask others: ► data owner ► business process owner ► data users Provide list of elements flagged as “questionable for inclusion in adaptation” Ask for any additional, known, near-future requirements 19 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Finalizing the Source Data Dictionary Fill in all missing definitions Make any additional exlusions, found in review Make any additions (e.g., new requirements) Resolve any definitional conflicts (e.g., semantic overlap) (Optional) Send entire data dictioary to local data owners and local data users for final review; solicit final feedback Make any final changes to data dictionary 20 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® DEVELOPING A GEODATABASE ALIGNED TO YOUR FINAL DATA DICTIONARY 21 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Creating the Final “Source” Geodatabase Remember that you are still working on the copy of your local geodatabase that you made earlier Make deletions based on additional exclusions developed in the review process Do NOT make additions to your schema (e.g., adding a feature class or attribute) if there are no data records present for the element(s) Implement any other changes resulting from the review process 22 of 24
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BUILDING STRONG ® Review 23 of 24 Understanding “source” and “target” terminology Understanding what is a valid SDSFIE element Understanding how to validate and refine local requirements in a Source Data Dictionary Understanding where to obtain the definitions to populate a Source Data Dictionary Understanding how to develop a geodatabase consistent with the populated Source Data Dictionary
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BUILDING STRONG ® Next steps Videos should be seen next are ► Creating the Local Adaptation Contact sdsfie@usace.army.mil with comments or additional informationsdsfie@usace.army.mil 24 of 24
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