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{{Short description|Historical storage format for geospatial data}}
{{multiple issues|{{lead too long|date=October 2012}}
{{externalMore linkscitations needed|date=OctoberJanuary 20122022}}
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The '''Spatial Archive and Interchange Format''' ('''SAIF''', pronounced ''safe'') was defined in the early 1990s as a self-describing, extensible format designed to support interoperability and storage of [[Geographic data and information|geospatial data]].
 
==SAIF dataset==
SAIF has two major components that together define SAIFtalk. The first is the Class Syntax Notation (CSN), a [[data definition language]] used to define a dataset's schema. The second is the Object Syntax Notation (OSN), a data language used to represent the object data adhering to the schema.<ref name="saif3.2"/> The CSN and OSN are contained in the same physical file, along with a directory at the beginning of the file. The use of ASCII text and a straightforward syntax for both CSN and OSN ensure that they can be parsed easily and understood directly by users and [[Developer (software)|developers]]. A SAIF dataset, with a {{Not a typo|.saf}} or {{Not a typo|.zip}} extension, is compressed using the zip archive format.
 
==Schema definition==
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==Inheritance==
SAIF supports multiple inheritance, although common usage involved single inheritance only.<ref name="saif3.2">{{Cite web |url=http://home.gdbc.gov.bc.ca/SAIF/ |title=Spatial Archive and Interchange Format:Formal Definition Release 3.2 |access-date=2010-11-24 |archive-date=2001-05-17 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010517101331/http://home.gdbc.gov.bc.ca/SAIF/ |website=Geographic Data BC|url-status=dead }}</ref>
 
==Object referencing==
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The primary advantage of SAIF was that it was inherently extensible following object oriented principles. This meant that data transfers from one GIS environment to another did not need to follow the lowest common denominator between the two systems. Instead, data could be extracted from a dataset defined by the first GIS, transformed into an intermediary, i.e., the semantically rich SAIF model, and from there transformed into a model and format applicable to the second GIS.
 
This notion of model to model transformation was deemed to be realistic only with an [[Object-oriented programming|object oriented]] approach. It was recognized that scripts to carry out such transformations could in fact add information content. When Safe Software developed the Feature Manipulation Engine (FME), it was in large measure with the express purpose of supporting such transformations. The [http://archive.ilmb.gov.bc.ca/crgb/pba/saif/ FMEBC] was a freely available software application that supported a wide range of transformations using SAIF as the hub. The FME was developed as a commercial offering in which the intermediary could be held in memory instead of as a SAIF dataset.
 
== History ==
The SAIF project was established as a means of addressing interoperability between different geographic information systems. Exchange formats of particular prominence at the time included [http://www.gwg.nga.mil/ntb/baseline/docs/digest/part1.pdf DIGEST] (Digital Geographic Information Exchange Standard) and [[SDTS]] (Spatial Data Transfer Specification, later accepted as the Spatial Data Transfer Standard). These were considered as too inflexible and difficult to use. Consequently, the [[Executive Council of British Columbia|Government of British Columbia]] decided to develop SAIF and to put it forward as a national standard in [[Canada]].
 
SAIF became a Canadian national standard in 1993 with the approval of the Canadian General Standards Board. The last version of SAIF, published in January 1995, is designated as [CGIS-SAIF Canadian Geomatics Interchange Standard: Spatial Archive and Interchange Format: Formal Definition (Release 3.2),<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://publications.gc.ca/site/eng/64080/publication.html |title=CGIS-SAIF Canadian Geomaticsgeomatics Interchangeinterchange Standardstandard: Spatial Archivearchive and Interchangeinterchange Formatformat: Formal Definitiondefinition (Release 3.2)] / Prepared by the Ministry of the Environment, British Columbia. : P29-171-001-1995E - Government of Canada Publications - Canada.ca|date=July 2002}}</ref> issue CAN/CGSB-171.1-95, catalogue number P29-171-001-1995E.
 
The work on the SAIF modeling paradigm and the CSN classes was carried out principally by Mark Sondheim, Henry Kucera and Peter Friesen, all with the British Columbia government at the time. Dale Lutz and Don Murray of Safe Software developed the Object Syntax Notation and the [http://www.safe.com/reader_writerPDF/saif.pdf Reader and Writer] software that became part of the Feature Manipulation Engine.
 
SAIF was brought to the attention of Michael Stonebraker and Kenn Gardels of the [[University of California, Berkeley|University of California at Berkeley]], and then to those working on the initial version of the Open Geospatial Interoperability Specification (OGIS), the first efforts of what became the [[Open Geospatial Consortium]] (OGC). A series of 18 submissions to the ISO SQL Multimedia working group also helped tie SAIF to the original ISO work on geospatial features.
 
Today SAIF is of historical interest only. It is significant as a precursor to the [[Geography Markup Language]] and as the formative element in the development of the widely used [[FME (software)|Feature Manipulation Engine]].<ref name="xyht1">{{cite web |title=Freeing the Data |url=https://www.xyht.com/spatial-itgis/freeing-the-data/ |website=XYHt |access-date=5 November 2022}}</ref>
 
==See also==
* {{ Annotated link | GeoJSON}}
* {{ Annotated link | GeoPackage}}
* {{ Annotated link | File format (GIS)}}
* {{ Annotated link | FME (software)}}
 
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{nofootnotes|date=September 2020}}
* Sondheim, M., K. Gardels, and K. Buehler, 1999. GIS Interoperability. pp.&nbsp;347–358. in Geographical Information Systems (Second Edition), Volume 1, edited by Paul A. Longley, Michael F. Goodchild, David J. Magurie and Davide W. Rhind.
* Sondheim, M., P. Friesen, D. Lutz, and D. Murray. 1997. Spatial Archive and Interchange Format (SAIF). in Spatial Database Transfer Standards 2: Characteristics for Assessing Standards and Full Descriptions of the National and International Standards in the World. edited by Moellering H. and Hogan R. Elsevier, Netherlands. {{ISBN|0-08-042433-3}}.
* Surveys and Resource Mapping Branch. Spatial Archive and Interchange Format, Release 3.2, Formal Definition. 1995. (also Release 3.1 (1994); 3.0 (1993); 2.0, (1992); 1.0 (1991); and 0.1, (1990)) Surveys and Resource Mapping Branch, British Columbia Ministry of Environment, Lands and Parks. 258p. Also published by the Canadian General Standards Board, CAN/CGSB-171.1-95. Available by request from the GeoBC Service Desk, http://www.ilmb.gov.bc.ca/geobc/servicedesk.html.
 
==External links==