the skeletal representation of cartographic lines, areas, polygons,
cartographic elements, and so forth. It carries positional and
representational information. The alphabetic sign curve has a
nonlinear functional representation, has length, and occupies no
area. It joins at least three points on the plane or the space. It is
part of the skeletal representation of areas, cartographic
elements, and so forth. It carries positional and representational
information. The alphabetic sign blank space carries only
positional information and has no visible representation.
There are four cartographic operations: (1) concatenation, (2)
image construction, (3) coordinate transformation, and (4)
addition. Concatenation is the operation which allows the
connection of two alphabetic signs to create a more complex
sign, two complex signs, or a complex sign and an alphabetic
sign to create even more complex signs.
Image construction is the operation that adds to the skeletal
representation some or all of the Bertin (1983) visual variables:
size, value, pattern, color, orientation, and shape, to create a
cartographic element at the original scale.
Coordinate transformation is the operation that takes the
cartographic element (at the original size) and modifies it to
reduce it to the map size, location, and orientation.
Addition is the algebraic operation which allows insertion/
removal of cartographic elements (or a portion of them) to/from
a spatial database or a map. In this operation, the graphic
representation of a spatial database or a map are considered, at
the beginning, as a blank space (SP) filled only with positional
information. Then, Sp, is modified by the addition operation by
adding (or removing) cartographic elements carrying locational
information, resulting in a new version of the space (SP,,,).
Cartographic rules are the regulations for constructing
cartographic elements. There are three different sources of
cartographic rules: (1) product planning and design, (2) element
priority, and (3) element representation.
Product planning and design is the process of selecting all of the
general and particular characteristics of spatial data (for
example, an individual map or map series). Characteristics such
as components, scale, projection, surface of reference, units,
specific graphic symbols to be used, and characteristics of those
symbols are set during this process.
Element priority is the order of placement of cartographic
elements on the graphic representation of the terrain. Features
with higher priority are placed before features with lower
priority. This priority is related to each particular application
and is generally related to the level of importance and
permanency of terrain features.
Element representation is how terrain features are represented
graphically, and the interrelation of these representations. For
example, on most topographic maps, relief is represented by
contour lines.
Cartographic rules can be grouped as general, layer-related, and
priority rules. General rules apply to complete spatial data bases
(topographic map series) as a whole. For example, the following
rule applies to the 7.5-minute series (1:24,000 scale) of the
USGS:
Every 7.5-minute map should have a legend and a title block as
part of the map heading. The title block must include the
following information: Quadrangle and state or states’ names,
county name, map series ID, and agency. The legend must show
the road classification and route signs and must be placed on the
lower-right margin of the map.
Layer-related rules apply to each coverage of cartographic
elements, in particular, and to intercoverage relations. There are
rules for each one of these coverages. For example, the following
rule applies to hydrography and hypsography, respectively:
Two natural flowing water features cannot cross each other.
Contour lines of the same type should not cross each other.
The following interfamily rule applies to hydrography and
hypsography:
A standing water body cannot be crossed by contours.
There are more than seventy general, coverage-related, and
interfamily cartographic rules at this time (Ramirez, 1988), and
as the analytical study of maps progresses, more rules are
expected to be found.
Priority rules are purpose dependent. Two major criteria are used
in their establishment: importance and permanency. The most
important cartographic features are those that will remain
unchanged on a graphic representation (such as a map) in those
situations where some features must be altered (for example, in
overcrowded areas). If two features are of equal importance, then
the most permanent is the one that will remain unchanged.
Permanency is related to the longevity of terrain features. The
longer a terrain feature stays without undergoing any change, the
more permanent its cartographic representation.
The writing mechanism of the cartographic language is the
Universal Mapping Command (UMC) (Ramirez, 1991). The
general expression of a UMC is:
UMCz-«(QG(K(((cA^)^[(ciB)]^-)(«U»«V»«
U5«Vi»)))). (1)
A UMC is a formula-like expression that allows analytical
representation of any graphic element of a spatial product (such
as a topographic map). UMCs make use of the cartographic
alphabet and cartographic operations, plus some additional
operators (K, c, c1) to express cartographic elements.
K is the cartographic element restriction which is one or more
constraints imposed over the whole cartographic element.
Topology and layer and feature constraints can be defined
680
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B4. Vienna 1996
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