ISO/IEC TS 11581-41:2014 provides guidance for developers and designers creating and/or using icons and provides a basis for the standardization of icons. It also provides a framework for creating future International Standards dealing with icons as parts of the ISO/IEC 11581 series and for identifying icon-related information to be used in any accompanying icon registries. It is intended to be used with ISO/IEC 11581-40 to create a registry of icons.
In biometric performance testing and reporting, careful consideration needs to be given to the characteristic differences of each modality (fingerprint, face, iris, etc.). These differences naturally require variations within the general methodology defined in ISO/IEC 19795-1. ISO/IEC TR 19795-3:2007 describes the methodologies relating to these modality-dependent variations. It presents and defines methods for determining, given a specific biometric modality, how to develop a technical performance test.
The purpose of this technical report is to describe a set of procedures for the consistent registration of value domains and their attributes in a registry. This technical report is not a data entry manual, but a user's guide for conceptualizing a value domain and its components for the purpose of consistently establishing good quality metadata. An organization may adapt and/or add to these procedures as necessary.
This Technical Report gives mechanisms for formally specifying the syntax of XML-based languages. For example, the syntax of XHTML 1.0 can be specified in RELAX.Compared with DTDs, RELAX provides the following advantages:?Specification in RELAX uses XML instance (i.e., document) syntax, ?RELAX provides rich datatypes, and ?RELAX is namespace-aware.The RELAX specification consists of two parts, RELAX Core and RELAX Namespace. This part of the Technical Report gives RELAX Core, which may be used to describe markup languages containing a single XML namespace. Part 2 of this Technical Report gives RELAX Namespace, which may be used to describe markup languages containing more than a single XML namespace, consisting of more than one RELAX Core document.Given a sequence of elements, a software module called the RELAX Core processor compares it against a specification in RELAX Core and reports the result. The RELAX Core processor can be directly invoked by the user, and can also be invoked by another software module called the RELAX Namespace processor.RELAX may be used in conjunction with DTDs. In particular, notations and entities declared by DTDs can be constrained by RELAX.This part of the Technical Report also gives a subset of RELAX Core, which is restricted to DTD features plus datatypes. This subset is very easy to implement, and with the exception of datatype information, conversion between this subset and XML DTDs results in no information loss.
For aspects of quality specific to facial images, ISO/IEC TR 29794-5:2010: ?specifies terms and definitions that are useful in the specification, use and testing of face image quality metrics; ?defines the purpose, intent, and interpretation of face image quality scores.Performance assessment of quality algorithms and standardization of quality algorithms are outside the scope of ISO/IEC TR 29794-5:2010.
ISO/IEC TR 9573-11:2004 defines the document structures and style specifications for standards document interchange (in particular, ISO standards). Element types and attributes for ISO standards are defined and two profiles (a database-oriented profile and a document-oriented profile) are provided.
The document structures are described by
- an SGML (ISO 8879) DTD,
- an XML DTD, and
- a RELAX NG (ISO/IEC 19757-2) schema.
The style specifications are described by
- DSSSL (ISO/IEC 10179),
- XSLT, and
- XSL.
Rendering examples and a list of processing tools are provided for information.
ISO/IEC TS 20071-11:2012 applies to all static images that are used in any type of electronic document. It also applies to individual images within a slide show of electronic images. ISO/IEC TS 20071-11:2012 does not apply to moving images (e.g. movies). The guidance contained in ISO/IEC TS 20071-11:2012 is intended to be used by the person who creates content to be placed in an electronic document. There is no expectation that this person will have any additional expertise beyond understanding the contents of the document and why an image was chosen to be placed within the document. While the main intent of the guidance within ISO/IEC TS 20071-11:2012 is the creation of text alternatives, the information identified in this guidance could be placed in the main document text, reducing the length of the resulting text alternatives. However, placing information in the main document text does not fully replace the function of having some text alternatives for each image.
This is the first amendment to ISO/IEC TR 19758:2003 and ISO/IEC TR 19758:2003 provides a DSSSL (ISO/IEC 10179:1996) library that makes it feasible to describe DSSSL specification for documents described by SGML (ISO 8879:1986) or XML (Extensible Markup Language).The library can deal with some complex compositions programmed by a number of complicated DSSSL specification statements. Those compositions consist of the formatting objects: paper size, paper placement, unit, basic composition style, font, character size, headline, page number, note, inline note, emphasizing mark, superscript/subscript, word-length adjustment, character space adjustment, clause, list, table, heading, ruby, paragraph indentation, score, rule, and inline.The DSSSL library contains the simple parameter data and the four files:?full parameter generator; ?function set; ?page model set; ?flow object construction rules.Their actual data are specified in ISO/IEC TR 19758:2003.
This is the third amendment to ISO/IEC TR 19758:2003 and ISO/IEC TR 19758:2003 provides a DSSSL (ISO/IEC 10179:1996) library that makes it feasible to describe DSSSL specification for documents described by SGML (ISO 8879:1986) or XML (Extensible Markup Language).The library can deal with some complex compositions programmed by a number of complicated DSSSL specification statements. Those compositions consist of the formatting objects: paper size, paper placement, unit, basic composition style, font, character size, headline, page number, note, inline note, emphasizing mark, superscript/subscript, word-length adjustment, character space adjustment, clause, list, table, heading, ruby, paragraph indentation, score, rule, and inline.The DSSSL library contains the simple parameter data and the four files:?full parameter generator; ?function set; ?page model set; ?flow object construction rules.Their actual data are specified in ISO/IEC TR 19758:2003.
This is the first amendment to ISO/IEC 19794-11:2013 and ISO/IEC 19794-11:2013 specifies a data interchange format for processed signature/sign behavioural data extracted from a time series, captured using devices such as digitizing tablets, pen-based computing devices, or advanced pen systems.