Boundaries of solids are similar to surface boundaries. In normal 3-dimensional Euclidean space, one (composite) surface is distinguished as the exterior. In the more general case, this is not always possible.
Reference to an XML Schema fragment that specifies the content model of the propertys value. This is in conformance with the XML Schema Section 4.14 Referencing Schemas from Elsewhere.
The 'actuate' attribute is used to communicate the desired timing of traversal from the starting resource to the ending resource; it's value should be treated as follows:onLoad - traverse to the ending resource immediately on loading the starting resource onRequest - traverse from the starting resource to the ending resource only on a post-loading event triggered for this purpose other - behavior is unconstrained; examine other markup in link for hints none - behavior is unconstrained
The 'show' attribute is used to communicate the desired presentation of the ending resource on traversal from the starting resource; it's value should be treated as follows: new - load ending resource in a new window, frame, pane, or other presentation contextreplace - load the resource in the same window, frame, pane, or other presentation contextembed - load ending resource in place of the presentation of the starting resourceother - behavior is unconstrained; examine other markup in the link for hints none - behavior is unconstrained
<element name="exterior" type="gml:SurfacePropertyType" minOccurs="0"><annotation><appinfo><sch:pattern name="Check either href or content not both"><sch:rule context="gml:exterior"><sch:extends rule="hrefOrContent"/></sch:rule></sch:pattern></appinfo><documentation>Boundaries of solids are similar to surface boundaries. In normal 3-dimensional Euclidean space, one (composite) surface is distinguished as the exterior. In the more general case, this is not always possible.</documentation></annotation></element>
Reference to an XML Schema fragment that specifies the content model of the propertys value. This is in conformance with the XML Schema Section 4.14 Referencing Schemas from Elsewhere.
The 'actuate' attribute is used to communicate the desired timing of traversal from the starting resource to the ending resource; it's value should be treated as follows:onLoad - traverse to the ending resource immediately on loading the starting resource onRequest - traverse from the starting resource to the ending resource only on a post-loading event triggered for this purpose other - behavior is unconstrained; examine other markup in link for hints none - behavior is unconstrained
The 'show' attribute is used to communicate the desired presentation of the ending resource on traversal from the starting resource; it's value should be treated as follows: new - load ending resource in a new window, frame, pane, or other presentation contextreplace - load the resource in the same window, frame, pane, or other presentation contextembed - load ending resource in place of the presentation of the starting resourceother - behavior is unconstrained; examine other markup in the link for hints none - behavior is unconstrained
<element name="interior" type="gml:SurfacePropertyType" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"><annotation><appinfo><sch:pattern name="Check either href or content not both"><sch:rule context="gml:interior"><sch:extends rule="hrefOrContent"/></sch:rule></sch:pattern></appinfo><documentation>Boundaries of solids are similar to surface boundaries.</documentation></annotation></element>
A solid is the basis for 3-dimensional geometry. The extent of a solid is defined by the boundary surfaces (shells). A shell is represented by a composite surface, where every shell is used to represent a single connected component of the boundary of a solid. It consists of a composite surface (a list of orientable surfaces) connected in a topological cycle (an object whose boundary is empty). Unlike a Ring, a Shell's elements have no natural sort order. Like Rings, Shells are simple.
Ordered list of labels for all the axes of this CRS. The gml:axisAbbrev value should be used for these axis labels, after spaces and forbiddden characters are removed. When the srsName attribute is included, this attribute is optional. When the srsName attribute is omitted, this attribute shall also be omitted.
This attribute is included for backward compatibility with GML 2 and is deprecated with GML 3. This identifer is superceded by "gml:id" inherited from AbstractGMLType. The attribute "gid" should not be used anymore and may be deleted in future versions of GML without further notice.
Database handle for the object. It is of XML type ID, so is constrained to be unique in the XML document within which it occurs. An external identifier for the object in the form of a URI may be constructed using standard XML and XPointer methods. This is done by concatenating the URI for the document, a fragment separator, and the value of the id attribute.
The "srsDimension" is the length of coordinate sequence (the number of entries in the list). This dimension is specified by the coordinate reference system. When the srsName attribute is omitted, this attribute shall be omitted.
In general this reference points to a CRS instance of gml:CoordinateReferenceSystemType (see coordinateReferenceSystems.xsd). For well known references it is not required that the CRS description exists at the location the URI points to. If no srsName attribute is given, the CRS must be specified as part of the larger context this geometry element is part of, e.g. a geometric element like point, curve, etc. It is expected that this attribute will be specified at the direct position level only in rare cases.
Ordered list of unit of measure (uom) labels for all the axes of this CRS. The value of the string in the gml:catalogSymbol should be used for this uom labels, after spaces and forbiddden characters are removed. When the axisLabels attribute is included, this attribute shall also be included. When the axisLabels attribute is omitted, this attribute shall also be omitted.
Source
<complexType name="SolidType"><annotation><documentation>A solid is the basis for 3-dimensional geometry. The extent of a solid is defined by the boundary surfaces (shells). A shell is represented by a composite surface, where every shell is used to represent a single connected component of the boundary of a solid. It consists of a composite surface (a list of orientable surfaces) connected in a topological cycle (an object whose boundary is empty). Unlike a Ring, a Shell's elements have no natural sort order. Like Rings, Shells are simple.</documentation></annotation><complexContent><extension base="gml:AbstractSolidType"><sequence><element name="exterior" type="gml:SurfacePropertyType" minOccurs="0"><annotation><appinfo><sch:pattern name="Check either href or content not both"><sch:rule context="gml:exterior"><sch:extends rule="hrefOrContent"/></sch:rule></sch:pattern></appinfo><documentation>Boundaries of solids are similar to surface boundaries. In normal 3-dimensional Euclidean space, one (composite) surface is distinguished as the exterior. In the more general case, this is not always possible.</documentation></annotation></element><element name="interior" type="gml:SurfacePropertyType" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="unbounded"><annotation><appinfo><sch:pattern name="Check either href or content not both"><sch:rule context="gml:interior"><sch:extends rule="hrefOrContent"/></sch:rule></sch:pattern></appinfo><documentation>Boundaries of solids are similar to surface boundaries.</documentation></annotation></element></sequence></extension></complexContent></complexType>