Back

bizLocation

A Business Location is a uniquely identified and discretely recorded geospatial location that is meant to designate the specific place where an object is assumed to be following an event until it is reported to be at a different Business Location by a subsequent event. The bizLocation must be a resolvable URI that links to facility information and geo-location data.

A Business Location is a uniquely identified and discretely recorded geospatial location that is meant to designate the specific place where an object is assumed to be following an event until it is reported to be at a different Business Location by a subsequent event. The bizLocation must be a resolvable URI that links to facility information and geo-location data.

A Business Location is a uniquely identified and discretely recorded geospatial location that is meant to designate the specific place where an object is assumed to be following an event until it is reported to be at a different Business Location by a subsequent event. The bizLocation must be a resolvable URI that links to facility information and geo-location data.

A Business Location is a uniquely identified and discretely recorded geospatial location that is meant to designate the specific place where an object is assumed to be following an event until it is reported to be at a different Business Location by a subsequent event. The bizLocation must be a resolvable URI that links to facility information and geo-location data.

A Business Location is a uniquely identified and discretely recorded geospatial location that is meant to designate the specific place where an object is assumed to be following an event until it is reported to be at a different Business Location by a subsequent event. The bizLocation must be a resolvable URI that links to facility information and geo-location data.

A Business Location is a uniquely identified and discretely recorded geospatial location that is meant to designate the specific place where an object is assumed to be following an event until it is reported to be at a different Business Location by a subsequent event. The bizLocation must be a resolvable URI that links to facility information and geo-location data.

Range includes:

URI
xsd:string

Domains:

URI Comment
untp-dte:Event This abstract event structure provides a common language to describe supply chain events such as shipments, inspections, manufacturing processes, etc. There are four types of EPCIS event but this is an abstract class representing all common properties of an EPCIS event.
untp-dte:TransformationEvent Transformation represents an event in which input objects are fully or partially consumed and output objects are produced, such that any of the input objects may have contributed to all of the output objects - for example consuming bales of cotton to produce yarn.
untp-dte:ObjectEvent Object represents an event that happened to one or more physical or digital objects - such as an inspection or certification of a product or shipment. The physical objects may be identified either as specific items (eg a unique consignment number) or as a quantified amount of a product class (eg 100Kg of cotton yarn)
untp-dte:AggregationEvent Aggregation represents an event that happened to one or more objects that are physically aggregated together (physically constrained to be in the same place at the same time, as when cases are aggregated to a pallet). This event is also used to represent de-aggregation (eg unpacking) when businessStepCode is unpacking.
untp-dte:TransactionEvent Transaction represents an event in which one or more objects become associated or disassociated with one or more identified business transactions - such as the purchase / shipment of goods between buyer and seller.
untp-dte:AssociationEvent The association event represents the assembly of child sub-components to create a parent assembled item. For example a desktop computer assembled from power supply, hard drive, and motherboard. The association event is very similar in structure to the aggregation event but is used for physical assembly. An association event may represent a bill of materials used to assemble a product whilst an aggregation event may represent a packing list or items for transport.