Issue 10873: Translation of binary associations. (odm-rtf) Source: NIST (Dr. Conrad Bock, conrad.bock(at)nist.gov) Nature: Revision Severity: Critical Summary: Translation of binary associations. In 16.2.3 (More Advanced Concepts), third paragraph, next to last sentence, the domain of the OWL property is the class at the non-navigable end. This is because the ends of associations in UML are placed opposite the class they navigate from. Resolution: Replace text as described below. (Note: This issue actually refers to the forth paragraph.) Revised Text: Replace forth sentence of the forth paragraph of section 16.2.3 which currently reads: A UML binary association with one navigable end and one non-navigable end will be translated into a property whose domain is the navigable end. with A UML binary association with one navigable end and one non-navigable end will be translated into a property whose domain is the non-navigable end. Actions taken: March 30, 2007: received issue April 25, 2014: closed issue Discussion: FTF resources were scarce and priority was given to issues against normative sections, hence many issues such as this were left unresolved. Disposition: Deferred to RTF End of Annotations:===== m: webmaster@omg.org Date: 30 Mar 2007 00:59:12 -0500 To: Subject: Issue/Bug Report -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Name: Conrad Bock Company: NIST mailFrom: conrad.bock@nist.giv Notification: No Specification: Ontology Definition Metamodel Section: Chapter 16 FormalNumber: ptc/06-10-11 Version: RevisionDate: Page: Nature: Revision Severity: Critical HTTP User Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.7.2) Gecko/20040804 Netscape/7.2 (ax) Description Translation of binary associations. In 16.2.3 (More Advanced Concepts), third paragraph, next to last sentence, the domain of the OWL property is the class at the non-navigable end. This is because the ends of associations in UML are placed opposite the class they navigate from.