Hello John, others,

Thanks for those comments. I can see the value of maintaining consistency and 
being careful about changing things which have worked well for a long time, but 
I would rather not go back to the people who find the existing terminology 
confusing (these are people who have specifically commented on the standard 
name area_fraction) and tell them that we are not changing it because it has 
always been like that. I'd rather have a more positive message that might 
encourage them to appreciate the value of CF.


I'm not sure if this is true, but it looks to me as though the formulation 
"area_fraction" owes something to "volume_fraction", "mass_fraction" and 
"mole_fraction", all of which follow wide spread usage in the atmospheric and 
oceanographic science communities. People who use mass and volume fractions 
appear to be accustomed to having these expressed as percentages outside CF, so 
it is no surprise to find this done in CF. For "area_fraction" we have a 
slightly different situation: the term doesn't arise from expressions used in 
the land surface science communities, rather it is a semantic structure being 
imposed on them. Does anyone now if this interpretation is correct (i.e. that 
we use "area_fraction" rather than something which might be more familiar for 
land surface scientists such as "area_cover" in order to maintain consistency 
with mass, volume and mole fractions)?


regards,

Martin



________________________________
From: CF-metadata <[email protected]> on behalf of John Graybeal 
<[email protected]>
Sent: 01 February 2019 07:12
To: Jim Biard
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] Putting the units in a CF standard name: 
area_fraction

Martin,

I like your definition.

While there is a case for renaming the standard name, it’s long-time use, 
validity, and the fact only sophisticated data managers use standard names (and 
most data users just look primarily at variable names) says to me we should 
keep the existing standard names with fraction.

John

On Jan 31, 2019, at 08:07, Jim Biard 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:


Hi.

I understand that concern, but it has always been true that the units for a 
quantity identified by a standard name only has to be convertible using UDUNITS 
from the canonical units specified in the definition for that standard name. So 
percent is, by definition, valid for a quantity with units of '1'. As you can 
see below:

> udunits2
You have: 1
You want: percent
    1  = 100 percent
    x/percent = 100*(x/)

I guess I don't see the need for guidance here.

Grace and peace,

Jim

On 1/31/19 10:51 AM, Martin Juckes - UKRI STFC wrote:

Dear Jonathan,


we could certainly take that approach, though the definitions are not always 
accessible to people looking at the standard name, so they do not compensate 
for ambiguity in the name itself.


The current text '"Area fraction" means the fraction of horizontal area.' could 
be replaced with


"Area Fraction" is a dimensionless number representing a relative or 
proportional area. It may be expressed as a fraction, percentage or any other 
unit that conforms to "1".  It is evaluated as the area of interest divided by 
the grid cell area, scaled for the units chosen.


I still feel that there is a case for changing the name to, for example, 
"relative_area" in order to reduce confusion caused by people who assume that a 
fraction is a quantity that does not have units,


regards,

Martin




________________________________
From: CF-metadata 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> on 
behalf of Jonathan Gregory 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: 31 January 2019 13:20:24
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [CF-metadata] Putting the units in a CF standard name: area_fraction

Dear Martin

I'd rather we retained "fraction" in the standard name, because it's always
been there, it's used in other contexts in a consistent way, and there isn't
anything actually incorrect with it, as you say. Could we instead add a note
to the definitions pointing out that percent is acceptable as a unit for them?

Best wishes

Jonathan

----- Forwarded message from Martin Juckes - UKRI STFC 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> -----



Date: Wed, 30 Jan 2019 22:40:12 +0000
From: Martin Juckes - UKRI STFC 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
To: Steven Emmerson <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: "CF-metadata ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)" 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] Putting the units in a CF standard name:
       area_fraction

Hi Steve,


The issue is more that CF allows more freedom in the choice of units than many 
people expect from a "fraction".


A second problem, I think the problem is that I didn't explain the issue 
clearly. In the CMIP data request we are specifying that variables with 
standard name "area_fraction" should be given as percentages. This is allowed 
by the CF convention: an "area_fraction" can be 0.5 or 50%. The reason that 
percentages are being used is because "area_fraction" is being used like the 
proportion of land covered in grass, and people are used to having these as 
percentages rather than fractions. It is all perfectly correct as far as the 
convention goes, but people often interpret the use of "area_fraction" for a 
percentage as an error.


Given that we have the framework of allowing flexibility in the choice of 
units, I feel it would be better to avoid having the term "fraction" in the 
standard name, given that it is often interpreted as implying a specific choice 
for the units.


regards,

Martin


________________________________
From: Steven Emmerson <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: 30 January 2019 21:37
To: Juckes, Martin (STFC,RAL,RALSP)
Cc: CF-metadata ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>)
Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] Putting the units in a CF standard name: 
area_fraction

On Wed, Jan 30, 2019 at 12:54 PM Martin Juckes - UKRI STFC 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>>
 wrote:

I'm afraid I don't understand your comment. When I search for "fraction" in the 
NIST document I find it defined as being a ratio, which is inconsistent with 
the current CF usage. The CF standard name concept "area_fraction" is not what 
NIST or others understand as a "fraction". I'm suggesting a change to remove 
this inconsistency.

Unless we're talking past one another, I'll have to disagree.  The NIST unit 
for "mass fraction" is "1" -- even though it's a ratio. A fraction can be 
represented many ways. "1:2", "1/2", and "0.5" all represent the same fraction, 
for example.

Does the CF convention require a particular representation for a fraction?

Regards,
Steve Emmerson
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