Spatial data integrity constraints in object oriented geographic data modeling

Author(s):  
Karla A. V. Borges ◽  
Alberto H. F. Laender ◽  
Clodoveu A. Davis
2012 ◽  
Vol 204-208 ◽  
pp. 4872-4877
Author(s):  
Da Xi Ma ◽  
Xiao Hong Liu ◽  
Li Wei Ma

By analyzing the attributes of three-dimensional space data model, the integrated 3D spatial data adopts object-oriented method for digital landslide modeling. It achieves spatial data modeling for landslide geological entity. An experimental case is given to indicate the feasibility of this approach for spatial data modeling.


Author(s):  
Yamin Wang ◽  
Ramakrishna V. Vishnuvajjala ◽  
Wei-Tek Tsai

Modeling synchronization among threads is important for the specification, design, and testing of concurrent object-oriented applications such as those written in Java. This paper proposes Synchronized Method Sequence Specification (SMtSS), a mechanism for specifying synchronization requirements among multiple threads sharing a common object. SMtSS identifies two kinds of synchronization among the sharing threads, internal and external ones, and explicitly specifies the synchronization scenarios. SMtSS also proposes notations for specifying different data integrity constraints on method executions. This paper also proposes specification-slicing techniques to obtain specific behavior of certain threads from SMtSS specifications. Finally, this paper discusses how SMtSS specifications can be useful in the design and testing of concurrent object-oriented applications in Java.


2002 ◽  
pp. 144-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karla A.V. Borges ◽  
Clodoveu A. Davis Jr. ◽  
Alberto H.F. Laender

This chapter addresses the relationship that exists between the nature of spatial information, spatial relationships, and spatial integrity constraints, and proposes the use of OMT-G (Borges et al., 1999; Borges et al., 2001), an object-oriented data model for geographic applications, at an early stage in the specification of integrity constraints in spatial databases. OMT-G provides appropriate primitives for representing spatial data, supports spatial relationships and allows the specification of spatial integrity rules (topological, semantic and user integrity rules) through its spatial primitives and spatial relationship constructs. Being an object-oriented data model, it also allows some spatial constraints to be encapsulated as methods associated to specific georeferenced classes. Once constraints are explicitly documented in the conceptual modeling phase, and methods to enforce the spatial integrity constraints are defined, the spatial database management system and the application must implement such constraints. This chapter does not cover integrity constraints associated to the representation of simple objects, such as constraints implicit to the geometric description of a polygon. Geometric constraints are related to the implementation, and are covered here in a higher level view, considering only the shape of geographic objects. Consistency rules associated with the representation of spatial objects are discussed in Laurini and Thompson (1992).


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