Subset of coordinateSystems.xsd for WCS 1.2 profile. Primary editor: Arliss Whiteside. Last updated 2007-04-23. Copyright © 2007 Open Geospatial Consortium, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Basic encoding for coordinate system axis objects, simplifying and restricting the DefinitionType as needed. The name by which this coordinate system axis is identified. Definition of a coordinate system axis. Set of alternative identifications of this coordinate system axis. The first axisID, if any, is normally the primary identification code, and any others are aliases. Comments on or information about this coordinate system axis, including data source information. An identification of a coordinate system axis. The abbreviation used for this coordinate system axis. This abbreviation can be used to identify the ordinates in a coordinate tuple. Examples are X and Y. The codeSpace attribute can reference a source of more information on a set of standardized abbreviations, or on this abbreviation. Direction of this coordinate system axis (or in the case of Cartesian projected coordinates, the direction of this coordinate system axis at the origin). Examples: north or south, east or west, up or down. Within any set of coordinate system axes, only one of each pair of terms can be used. For earth-fixed CRSs, this direction is often approximate and intended to provide a human interpretable meaning to the axis. When a geodetic datum is used, the precise directions of the axes may therefore vary slightly from this approximate direction. Note that an EngineeringCRS can include specific descriptions of the directions of its coordinate system axes. For example, the path of a linear CRS axis can be referenced in another document, such as referencing a GML feature that references or includes a curve geometry. The codeSpace attribute can reference a source of more information on a set of standardized directions, or on this direction. Identifier of the unit of measure used for this coordinate system axis. The value of this coordinate in a coordinate tuple shall be recorded using this unit of measure, whenever those coordinates use a coordinate reference system that uses a coordinate system that uses this axis. Association to a coordinate system axis, either referencing or containing the definition of that axis. Basic encoding for coordinate system objects, simplifying and restricting the DefinitionType as needed. The name by which this coordinate system is identified. A coordinate system (CS) is the set of coordinate system axes that spans a given coordinate space. A CS is derived from a set of (mathematical) rules for specifying how coordinates in a given space are to be assigned to points. The coordinate values in a coordinate tuple shall be recorded in the order in which the coordinate system axes associations are recorded, whenever those coordinates use a coordinate reference system that uses this coordinate system. This abstract complexType shall not be used, extended, or restricted, in an Application Schema, to define a concrete subtype with a meaning equivalent to a concrete subtype specified in this document. Set of alternative identifications of this coordinate system. The first csID, if any, is normally the primary identification code, and any others are aliases. Comments on or information about this coordinate system, including data source information. Ordered sequence of associations to the coordinate system axes included in this coordinate system. An identification of a coordinate system. Association to a coordinate system axis. Association to a coordinate system, either referencing or containing the definition of that coordinate system. A 1-, 2-, or 3-dimensional coordinate system. Gives the position of points relative to orthogonal straight axes in the 2- and 3-dimensional cases. In the 1-dimensional case, it contains a single straight coordinate axis. In the multi-dimensional case, all axes shall have the same length unit of measure. A CartesianCS shall have one, two, or three usesAxis associations. Association to a Cartesian coordinate system, either referencing or containing the definition of that coordinate system.