This repository is for discussion of Use Cases relating to the future of astronomy data formats.
This document describes the approach of the astrodataformat group toward creating a white paper which describes the requirements on modern astronomical data formats.
We will have a structured process (described below) and utilize two sites to enable the work. All discussion is to be held on the astrodataformat Google group and all of the documents are kept on the astrodataformat repositories. These sites may respectively be found at:
All use cases are to be written on the associated wiki: https://github.com/astrodataformat/usecases/wiki
Members will need to belong to the astrodataformat google group. The group is open to any member of the astronomy community who wishes to participate. Along with belonging to this group, members are required, at minimum, to read the draft white paper to be submitted for publication and pass along any comments they may have. IF they agree to the content, then they will be added as co-authors on the draft.
Members are further encouraged to contribute use cases, extract requirements and provide wording for the draft. In this case, because we plan to utilize GitHub to hold these documents, members will need to obtain a GitHub account (see https://github.com/join for instructions on obtaining a free account). After the GitHub account is obtained, either @timj or @brianthomas can then add the member to the astrodataformat organization which will allow them permission to edit.
The project is broken up into several phases. Passage through these phases is roughly linear, but we may revisit a prior phase in order to capture missed information/correct errors/issues.
Members of the group will submit their use cases. There is no level of generality required. Use case scope may be set to any level of usage. Members should indicate ownership and work with other members to resolve commonalities, discrepancies and other issues in use cases.
Requirements will be extracted from use cases. The group will periodically reflect on whether the corpus of requirements have sufficient size and scope.
After compiling a list of requirements, and agreeing that the corpus is of sufficient size and scope, Members will be requested to vote on the contributed requirements. A simple value of 1, 0 or -1 shall be permitted for each member to attach to each requirement. After a sufficient number of members have voted, the survey will be tallied and the lowest 20% of requirements dropped. The group will be then polled with each member voting on whether the remaining corpus is of sufficient size, too large or too small. If it is either too big or small the threshold will be adjusted and another vote taken to determine if it is of sufficient size. Once it is agreed that the corpus is sufficient, then the corpus will be the requirements which will go into the white paper.
A white paper using the agreed corpus of requirements will be created. Members are encouraged to help contribute content and review drafts. When members are agreed that the paper is of sufficient quality, it will be submitted for publication to the A&C journal.
A few important ground rules for discussion
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Please refrain from criticism of the relevance of the use cases others contribute. It is fair to question clarity, completeness and meaning. Remember you will be allowed to vote on relevance in the ranking stage and can vote down any requirements you feel are edge cases or irrelevant for most astronomers.
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No discussion of implementation or design of a new astronomical data format is allowed. It's OK to utilize existing or imagined data formats to help illustrate use cases.