Naming Conventions

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Line 146: Line 146:
eba_met<br/> eba_met<br/>
eba_mod_xx eba_mod_xx
 +
 +See also: [[Namespaces|Reserved namespaces]]
<span style="background-color:yellow">RH: Is there a list of owners? Is there a desired limit to the length of the ns-prefix?</span> <span style="background-color:yellow">RH: Is there a list of owners? Is there a desired limit to the length of the ns-prefix?</span>

Revision as of 08:08, 12 October 2012

Contents

Folders

Folders are irrelevant to XML but important to control versioning of released files and ownership of these files.

  • Taxonomy files MUST be released as children of a folder.
  • The top level folder of any taxonomy MUST represent the owner of the taxonomy files.
  • The first level of sub folders MUST represent the content of the taxonomy files:
    • dict for metrics, dimensions, domains, members, families and perspectives;
    • fws for frameworks, taxonomies, tables, modules and other concepts that constitute the reporting requirements;
  • The first level of sub folders MAY represent the content of other taxonomy files:
    • ext for models;
    • func for functions for (formula) validations;
  • The second level of sub folders for the fws folder MUST represent the reporting framework in which the taxonomy resides;
  • The third level of sub folders for the reporting framework MUST represent the status of the files within;
  • The fourth level of sub folders for the status of the reporting framwork MUST represent the release date of the taxonomy files inside.
  • If dates are used to name folders, its notation MUST be: CCYYMMDD (no dashes or other characters).
  • Folder names MUST be in lower case.
  • Folder names MUST NOT use spaces (if a seperator is needed, an underscore is advised)

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Example:

  • dict
  • fws
    • finrep
      • normative
        • 20131201
  • ext
  • func

File names

File names are irrelevant to XML but the XBRL adoption of XPointer that addresses @id in named files makes it necessary to have rules on the file names:

Schema file names

  • File names MUST be in lower case;
  • File names MUST NOT be longer than 15 characters;
  • File names MUST NOT use spaces (if a seperator is need an underscore is advised);
  • File name extension '.xsd' MUST be used for schema files;
  • Schema file names MUST represent their technical content according to the following table:
File name Content
tab tables
met metrics
dim dimensions
exp explicit domains
typ typed domains
mem explicit domain members
fam families
pers perspectives
hier member hierarchies
fws frameworks
? modules

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Linkbase file names

  • File names MUST be in lower case;
  • File name extension '.xml' MUST be used for linkbase files;
  • File names MUST NOT use spaces (if a seperator is need an underscore is advised);
  • Linkbase file names are created according to the following patterns:
    • 2.1 and generic label linkbase: 11-lab-22.xml
    • 2.1 and generic reference linkbase: 11-ref.xml
    • dimension-domain linkbases:
    • domain-member linkbases: 33-def.xml
    • table-dimension linkbases:
    • metrics-table linkbases:
    • presentation linkbases: 33-pre.xml
    • calculation linkbases: 33-cal.xml
    • formula linkbases:
    • table linkbases:

11 = the name of the schema file where the building block that requires the label is created (concept, linkrole etc.)
22 = a language code according to ISO 639-1 with the restriction to two characters lower case.
33 = the name of schema file where the children of the hosted relationships are created.

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Namespaces

Namespaces are the unique identifier of a schema file and part of the key on all the content that is created in that schema file. A namespace can be written as an URI or URN. With an URI there is an expectancy that it really identifies the schema. An URN is 'just' a name. A much used practice is to express URI's as URL's without the extension of the actual file it addresses. These URI's are being used as URL's to store the schema file on a server that can be called from software.

A (target)namespace in a schema is often abbreviated with a namespace prefix. This allows for shorthand qualified names to be used inside schema's. Not all XML software can handle schema's that have no namespace prefix assigned to them, and will generate a warning or error. As a consequence two strings are being created and have naming conventions assigned to them.

Target namespace

  • Namespaces MUST be in lower case;
  • Namespaces MUST reflect URI's;
  • Namespaces MUST reflect the actual location (URL) that the schemas are accessable by software (no GUI);

DTS Authors are free to assign any webserver address, however since the URI represents the physical location, the names of folders will automatically form the 'end' of the URI assigned.

Example for the finrep metrics schema at EBA:
xbrl.eba.europa.eu/.../dict/met.xsd
Where the dots represent any folder structure EBA finds appropriate.

Namespace prefix

  • Namespace prefix' MUST be in lower case;
  • Namespace prefix' MUST only use characters a-z0-9, -, _;
  • Namespace prefix' MUST be a concatenation of the owner of the schema file, underscore, name of the schema file without the extension which MAY be followed by another underscore and a two letter subdivision;

Examples:
eba_met
eba_mod_xx

See also: Reserved namespaces

RH: Is there a list of owners? Is there a desired limit to the length of the ns-prefix?

Concepts

Types

Codes and enumeration values

Linkroles

Resources

Specials

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