EvaBlomqvist (Talk | contribs)  (New page: {{Definition |Reengineering Ontology Design Patterns (Reengineering OPs) |Reengineering OPs are transformation rules applied in order to create a new ontology (target model) starting from ...)  | 
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== Description ==  | == Description ==  | ||
| − | Reengineering OPs are transformation rules applied in order to create a new ontology (target model) starting from elements of a source model. Reengineering OPs are described in terms of metamodel transformation rules.  | + | Reengineering OPs are transformation rules applied in order to create a new  | 
| + | ontology (target model) starting from elements of a source model. The target  | ||
| + | model is an ontology, while the source model can be either an ontology, or  | ||
| + | a non-ontological resource e.g., a thesaurus concept, a data model pattern, a  | ||
| + | UML model, a linguistic structure, etc.  | ||
| + | Reengineering OPs are described in terms of metamodel transformation rules.  | ||
| + | We distinguish two types of Reengineering OPs, Schema Re-engineering OPs and Refacoring OPs.  | ||
| + | |||
| + | [[Category:CorrespondenceOP]]  | ||
Reengineering OPs are transformation rules applied in order to create a new ontology (target model) starting from elements of a source model. The target model is an ontology, while the source model can be either an ontology, or a non-ontological resource e.g., a thesaurus concept, a data model pattern, a UML model, a linguistic structure, etc. Reengineering OPs are described in terms of metamodel transformation rules. We distinguish two types of Reengineering OPs, Schema Re-engineering OPs and Refacoring OPs.
This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.