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<!--
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       '$RCSfile$'
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       Copyright: 2000 Regents of the University of California and the
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                  National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis
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     For Details: http://knb.ecoinformatics.org/
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        '$Author: berkley $'
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          '$Date: 2001-07-25 08:57:31 -0700 (Wed, 25 Jul 2001) $'
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      '$Revision: 808 $'
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    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
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    it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
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    the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
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    (at your option) any later version.
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    This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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    but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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    MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
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    GNU General Public License for more details.
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    You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
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    along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
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    Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA
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-->
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<!-- EML DTD document that defines the structural
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     characteristics of physical objects -->
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<!-- The root element, which contains an identifier and 
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     an physical description -->
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<!ELEMENT eml-physical (identifier, format, characterEncoding?, size?, authentication*, compressionMethod?, 
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                                         encodingMethod?, numHeaderLines?, recordDelimiter?, maxRecordLength?, 
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                                         quoteCharacter*, literalCharacter*, (fieldStartColumn?, (fieldDelimiter | fieldWidth))* )>
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<!-- File identifier of the metadata document -->
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<!ELEMENT identifier (#PCDATA)>
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<!ATTLIST identifier
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  system CDATA #IMPLIED
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>
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<!-- size -->
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<!ELEMENT size (#PCDATA)>
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<!ATTLIST size
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  unit CDATA "bytes"
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>
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<!-- Authentication value and method -->
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<!ELEMENT authentication (#PCDATA)>
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<!ATTLIST authentication
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  method CDATA #IMPLIED
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>
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<!-- Entity format (e.g., text, name of various binary formats [TIFF]) -->
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<!ELEMENT format (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- characterEncoding fro text files (e.g., ASCII, UTF-8) -->
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<!ELEMENT characterEncoding (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- Method of compression -->
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<!ELEMENT compressionMethod (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- Method of encoding -->
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<!ELEMENT encodingMethod (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- The character used to delimit records in the entity -->
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<!ELEMENT recordDelimiter (#PCDATA)>
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<!ELEMENT maxRecordLength (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- The character used to delimit quote data values so that the
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     filed delimeters can be used in the data value, typically
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     " or ' -->
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<!ELEMENT quoteCharacter (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- The character used to escape special characters
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     so that they are interpreted literally, usually \  -->
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<!ELEMENT literalCharacter (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- Number of header lines or information that prepares data -->
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<!ELEMENT numHeaderLines (#PCDATA)>
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<!--
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                        Variable width format fields (attributes) can vary in their 
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                        field length, thus the end of the field is 
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                        delimited by a special character called a 
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                        field delimiter (typically a comma or a space).
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                        Data sets are generally classified as fixedWidth
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                        format or variableWidth format, but we have
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                        determined that this is actually a per-field
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                        classification because one may encounter
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                        fixedWidth fields mixed together in the same
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                        data file with variableWidth fields.
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                        In our encoding scheme, the start of each field
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                        is assumed to be the column after the last column
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                        of the previous field, or the first column
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                        if this is the first field in the dataset, unless 
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                        the starting column is explicity enumerated using the
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                        "fieldStartColumn" element.
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                        The end column for each field is classified
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                        using either a special character delimeter indicated
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                        using the filedDelimiter element,
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                        or a fixed field length indicated by using the "fieldWidth"
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                        element.  The delimiter for the last field in the data set can be omitted.
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                        variableWidth fields can vary in their field length, and the end of
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                        the field is delimited by a special character
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                        called a field delimiter, usually a comma or
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                        a tab character.  fixedWidth fields have a set
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                        length, and so the end of the field can always
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                        be determined by adding the fieldWidth to the
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                        starting column number.  Here is an example:
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                        Assume we have the following data in a data set:
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                        May,100aaaa,1.2,
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                        April,200aaaa,3.4,
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                        June,300bbbb,4.6,
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                        The metadata indicating the physical layout of the 4 fields would include the 
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                        following:
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                          <delimiter>,</delimiter>
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>
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                          <delimiter>,</delimiter>
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                        In a strictly fixed format file, the metadata would be slightly different:
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                        May100aaaa1.2
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                        Apr200aaaa3.4
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                        Jun300bbbb4.6
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>
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                          <fieldWidth>4</fieldWidth>
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>           
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                        or, one could explicitly describe the starting columns:
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                          <fieldStartColumn>1</fieldStartColumn>
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>
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                          <fieldStartColumn>4</fieldStartColumn>
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>
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                          <fieldStartColumn>7</fieldStartColumn>
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                          <fieldWidth>4</fieldWidth>
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                          <fieldStartColumn>11</fieldStartColumn>
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                          <fieldWidth>3</fieldWidth>                   
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-->
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<!ELEMENT fieldStartColumn (#PCDATA)>
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<!ELEMENT fieldDelimiter (#PCDATA)>
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<!ELEMENT fieldWidth (#PCDATA)>
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<!ELEMENT paragraph (#PCDATA)>
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<!-- End of file -->
(11-11/18)