Building Semantic Schema: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "Use https://chatgpt.com/share/696c6799-f860-8010-b2f1-35d864bf3fb9 A schema is a formal, machine-readable contract that declares what exists, what it means, and what must be true—without saying how to build it == A schema is not == A schema is '''not''' any of the following: * Geometry * Code * Instructions * Algorithms * Drawings * A script * A model in FreeCAD All of the above are '''derived artifacts''' — they are produced *from* a schema by compilers, generat...") |
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Source - [https://chatgpt.com/share/696c6799-f860-8010-b2f1-35d864bf3fb9] | |||
A schema is a formal, machine-readable contract that declares what exists, what it means, and what must be true—without saying how to build it | A schema is a formal, machine-readable contract that declares what exists, what it means, and what must be true—without saying how to build it | ||
== What a schema is == | |||
A schema is an '''abstraction''' that defines meaning, structure, and constraints, '''independent of any particular file format or tool'''. | |||
A schema is: | |||
* Conceptual before it is representational | |||
* Declarative rather than procedural | |||
* Concerned with '''what is true''', not '''how it is produced''' | |||
A schema does '''not''' inherently belong to: | |||
* JSON | |||
* YAML | |||
* XML | |||
* IFC | |||
* FreeCAD | |||
* Revit | |||
* Any specific software system | |||
Those are merely '''serialization formats''' or '''containers''' used to express the schema. | |||
== Role of the compiler == | |||
The purpose of a compiler is to '''translate a schema into a target representation'''. | |||
A compiler: | |||
* Interprets the schema’s meaning and constraints | |||
* Resolves ambiguities and degrees of freedom | |||
* Applies deterministic construction rules | |||
* Emits a concrete artifact in a target domain | |||
Examples of compiler targets include: | |||
* FreeCAD geometry | |||
* IFC models | |||
* Permit drawings | |||
* Bills of materials | |||
* Installation instructions | |||
* Inspection checklists | |||
== Key separation == | |||
* The '''schema''' defines intent and truth | |||
* The '''compiler''' defines execution | |||
* The '''output''' is disposable and regenerable | |||
This separation is what enables: | |||
* Lossless regeneration | |||
* Automation at scale | |||
* Tool independence | |||
* Safe use of AI | |||
== Summary == | |||
A schema is a tool-independent abstraction of meaning and constraints. | |||
A compiler is the mechanism that translates that abstraction into a specific, concrete output. | |||
== A schema is not == | == A schema is not == | ||
Latest revision as of 05:34, 18 January 2026
Source - [1]
A schema is a formal, machine-readable contract that declares what exists, what it means, and what must be true—without saying how to build it
What a schema is
A schema is an abstraction that defines meaning, structure, and constraints, independent of any particular file format or tool.
A schema is:
- Conceptual before it is representational
- Declarative rather than procedural
- Concerned with what is true, not how it is produced
A schema does not inherently belong to:
- JSON
- YAML
- XML
- IFC
- FreeCAD
- Revit
- Any specific software system
Those are merely serialization formats or containers used to express the schema.
Role of the compiler
The purpose of a compiler is to translate a schema into a target representation.
A compiler:
- Interprets the schema’s meaning and constraints
- Resolves ambiguities and degrees of freedom
- Applies deterministic construction rules
- Emits a concrete artifact in a target domain
Examples of compiler targets include:
- FreeCAD geometry
- IFC models
- Permit drawings
- Bills of materials
- Installation instructions
- Inspection checklists
Key separation
- The schema defines intent and truth
- The compiler defines execution
- The output is disposable and regenerable
This separation is what enables:
- Lossless regeneration
- Automation at scale
- Tool independence
- Safe use of AI
Summary
A schema is a tool-independent abstraction of meaning and constraints.
A compiler is the mechanism that translates that abstraction into a specific, concrete output.
A schema is not
A schema is not any of the following:
- Geometry
- Code
- Instructions
- Algorithms
- Drawings
- A script
- A model in FreeCAD
All of the above are derived artifacts — they are produced *from* a schema by compilers, generators, or humans, but they are not the schema itself.