BS ISO/IEC 15944-4:2015
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Information technology. Business Operational View – Business transaction scenarios. Accounting and economic ontology
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2015 | 88 |
This part of ISO/IEC 15944 provides a set of UML class diagrams and conceptual explanations that circumscribe the Open-edi Business Transaction Ontology (OeBTO). It explains the mechanics of a business transaction state machine, the procedural component of an OeBTO, and the (internal) constraint component of OeBTO, its repository for business rules.
This part of ISO/IEC 15944 addresses collaborations among independent trading partners as defined in ISO/IEC 15944-1. This part of ISO/IEC 15944 applies to both binary collaborations (buyer and seller) and mediated collaborations (buyer, seller, third-party). The ontological features described herein propose standards only for the Business Operational View (BOV), that is, the business aspects of business transactions as they are defined in ISO/IEC 15944-1.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
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6 | Foreword |
7 | Figure fig_1 0 Introduction |
9 | Figure fig_2 |
10 | Figure fig_3 |
13 | Section sec_1 Section sec_2 Section sec_3 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms and definitions |
14 | Section sec_3.1 Section sec_3.2 Section sec_3.3 Section sec_3.4 Section sec_3.5 Section sec_3.6 Section sec_3.7 |
15 | Section sec_3.8 Section sec_3.9 Section sec_3.10 Section sec_3.11 Section sec_3.12 Section sec_3.13 Section sec_3.14 |
16 | Section sec_3.15 Section sec_3.16 Section sec_3.17 Section sec_3.18 Section sec_3.19 Section sec_3.20 Section sec_3.21 Section sec_3.22 Section sec_3.23 Section sec_3.24 |
17 | Section sec_3.25 Section sec_3.26 Section sec_3.27 Section sec_3.28 Section sec_3.29 Section sec_3.30 Section sec_3.31 Section sec_3.32 |
18 | Section sec_3.33 Section sec_3.34 Section sec_3.35 Section sec_3.36 Section sec_3.37 |
19 | Section sec_3.38 Section sec_3.39 Section sec_3.40 Section sec_3.41 Section sec_3.42 Section sec_3.43 Section sec_3.44 Section sec_3.45 |
20 | Section sec_3.46 Section sec_3.47 Section sec_3.48 Section sec_3.49 Section sec_3.50 Section sec_3.51 |
21 | Section sec_3.52 Section sec_3.53 Section sec_3.54 Section sec_3.55 Section sec_3.56 Section sec_3.57 |
22 | Section sec_3.58 Section sec_3.59 Section sec_3.60 Section sec_3.61 Section sec_3.62 Section sec_3.63 Section sec_3.64 Section sec_3.65 |
23 | Section sec_3.66 Section sec_3.67 |
24 | Section sec_4 Section sec_5 Section sec_5.1 4 Symbols and abbreviations 5 The declarative component of an OeBTO — Primitive and derived data classes 5.1 Person and economic resources |
25 | Figure fig_4 |
26 | Figure fig_5 |
27 | Figure fig_6 |
28 | Figure fig_7 |
29 | Figure fig_8 Section sec_5.2 5.2 The normative data categories for a business transaction involving an economic exchange: resources, events, and Persons plus their fundamental relationships |
30 | Figure fig_9 Figure fig_10 Section sec_5.2.1 |
31 | Section sec_5.2.2 Section sec_5.3 5.3 Addition of business event to basic exchange pattern |
32 | Figure fig_11 Section sec_5.4 5.4 Extension of the OeBTO into types |
33 | Figure fig_12 Figure fig_13 |
34 | Section sec_5.5 Figure fig_14 Section sec_5.6 5.5 Locations and claims 5.6 Adding commitments to economic exchanges |
35 | Figure fig_15 |
36 | Figure fig_16 Section sec_5.7 5.7 Business transactions with contracts |
37 | Figure fig_17 |
38 | Figure fig_18 Section sec_5.8 5.8 Typifying agreements and business transactions |
39 | Figure fig_19 Figure fig_20 |
40 | Section sec_6 Section sec_6.1 6 The procedural component of an OeBTO — Business transaction state machines 6.1 Relating ontological components to the Open-edi business transaction phases |
41 | Figure fig_21 |
42 | Figure fig_22 |
43 | Figure fig_23 |
44 | Figure fig_24 |
45 | Figure fig_25 |
46 | Figure fig_26 |
47 | Figure fig_27 |
48 | Figure fig_28 |
49 | Figure fig_29 |
50 | Figure fig_30 |
51 | Figure fig_31 |
52 | Section sec_7 Section sec_7.1 7 The constraint component of an OeBTO — Incorporating business rules into business transactions 7.1 Business rules and Open-edi constraints |
53 | Section sec_7.2 Section sec_7.3 7.2 OeBTO constraint examples 7.3 Summary |
55 | Annex sec_A Annex sec_A.1 Annex sec_A.2 Annex sec_A.3 Annex A (normative) Consolidated list of terms and definitions with cultural adaptability: ISO English and ISO French language equivalency |
56 | Annex sec_A.4 |
58 | Annex sec_A.5 |
59 | Annex sec_A.6 |
60 | Table tab_A.6 |
75 | Annex sec_B Annex sec_B.1 Annex sec_B.2 Annex B (informative) REA Model Background |
76 | Figure fig_B.1 Annex sec_B.3 Figure fig_B.2 |
77 | Annex sec_B.4 |
78 | Figure fig_B.3 Annex sec_B.5 |
79 | Figure fig_B.4 |
80 | Figure fig_B.5 |
81 | Annex sec_C Figure fig_C.1 Annex C (normative) Business Transaction Model (BTM): Two classes of constraints |
82 | Figure fig_C.2 |
83 | Figure fig_C.3 |
84 | Reference ref_1 Reference ref_2 Reference ref_3 Reference ref_4 Reference ref_5 Reference ref_6 Reference ref_7 Reference ref_8 Reference ref_9 Reference ref_10 Reference ref_11 Reference ref_12 Reference ref_13 Reference ref_14 Reference ref_15 Reference ref_16 Reference ref_17 Reference ref_18 Reference ref_19 Reference ref_20 Reference ref_21 Bibliography |
85 | Reference ref_22 Reference ref_23 Reference ref_24 Reference ref_25 Reference ref_26 Reference ref_27 |