Dear Ken Thanks for your email. I sympathise with the problem, but I don't agree with the proposal. Actually similar suggestions have been made before.
It's an important principle with the standard names that they always indicate their sign convention. This is so that, if a standard name is provided, the sign convention is unavoidably specified; if the sign convention were not in the standard name, but in another attribute e.g. positive, it is certain that it would be omitted sometimes by mistake. If the sign convention were specified in the standard name *and* another attribute, it is certain that they would sometimes be inconsistent by mistake. Either mistake would make the data less usable. You mention cases where the wrong standard name is given. I agree, that makes the data less usable too, but I'd say the solution to that is to fix the data, when the problem has been identified; we should not have to modify the convention in a way which would make it generally more error-prone. You also mention cases where you don't have a standard name but you do need a direction. Presumably you must have some other information in that case about what the quantity is - which attribute are you using? If it's the long name, you could put the sign convention in there, for example, as for standard names. New standard names can also be requested for instrumental quantities, and the direction doesn't have to be "up" or "down" in standard names. As you probably know, there are already standard names containing away_from to indicate their sign convention, just as you suggest. I agree that there is sometimes a need to know how to relate quantities with opposite sign conventions in their standard names. The standard names are mostly systematically constructed, but for use by humans; they aren't designed to be parsed by machines. If there is a need for some means to deal with this, I would favour recording the sign convention as a machine-readable extra piece of information in the standard name table. If we put it in the table, it must be consistent with the standard name; you'd just have to look it up, instead of trying to extract it from the standard name. Best wishes Jonathan ----- Forwarded message from "Kehoe, Kenneth E." <[email protected]> ----- > Date: Wed, 27 Sep 2017 22:49:20 +0000 > From: "Kehoe, Kenneth E." <[email protected]> > To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> > Subject: [CF-metadata] positive attribute expansion of use and reserved > values > > CF-metadata, > > I would like to propose an expansion of the use and reserved values for the > “positive” attribute (section 4.3), specifically to include values in > addition to the two reserved values of “up” and “down” to include “towards” > and “away”. > > Most variables define direction in the standard_name, but with > instrumentation a standard name is often not available or the correct > definition of the name exists with the wrong positive direction. Also, > needing to understand or extract direction from the standard_name can be > difficult for a simple tool not wanting to review the standard_name > definition just to see if a transformation is needed. Expanding the use of > the “positive” attribute would reduce the number of standard names by not > needing to include positive direction in the definition. This would also > follow the recommendation of being consistent with the definition between the > standard_name and positive attribute. The “positive” attribute is currently > reserved for use with coordinate dimensions only, but the same logic can be > used with data variables to indicate direction. For example rate of speed for > vertical velocities could be described by indicating positive = “up” when > vertical velocities are positive when moving away from the surface. > > Instruments are also often not installed perpendicular to the surface, and > the coordinate system is better described as towards or away from the > instrument. Specifically for radial instruments. Errors in misunderstanding > direction with radial velocities or accelerations are comment when not > specifically defined. There is no vendor standard. > > I’ll leave my suggestion at towards and away, but this could also be expanded > to include cardinal direction for East-West/North-South directions. > > Thanks, > > Ken > > > > > Kenneth E. Kehoe > Research Associate - University of Oklahoma > Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies > ARM Climate Research Facility - Data Quality Office > e-mail: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> | Office: 303-497-4754 | Cell: > 405-826-0299 > > _______________________________________________ > CF-metadata mailing list > [email protected] > http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata ----- End forwarded message ----- _______________________________________________ CF-metadata mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata
