Seamless data supply
Last updated
Last updated
A principle of OS MasterMap Topography Layer is that data is seamless, which means there are no fixed units of data supply. The nominal boundary of each packet of OS MasterMap Topography Layer data is defined by the user’s data selection polygon and by the data chunking method applied to break the supply into manageable units (if used).
With respect to the nominal boundary, data is supplied unclipped. This means that all features with geometry that overlaps the nominal boundary are supplied in their entirety.
There are occasions when a data update will temporarily leave a feature in an inconsistent state. This occurs when neighbouring data is updated, and the edits are applied to the seamless database at different times. According to the type of feature, the following results may be realised:
A break in a polygon boundary on the edge of an update area will cause neighbouring features to take on identical geometric properties and the broken line work to be removed from all polygon structuring. Once the update is completed, the polygons will resume their respective boundaries.
Where a polygon boundary is broken and there is no neighbouring polygon, the feature will be temporarily removed from supply. A query on this area between updates will not return the broken feature. A change- only query will return a departed feature (i.e. a Delete) to indicate that this feature has been removed from the supply. Once the complete edit has been applied to the database, the feature will be supplied with its original identity and history.
A polyline that crosses an updated area boundary may occasionally be broken by a partial update. Where this occurs, the line is flagged as broken and the component parts will be output separately in a multiline geometry.
Some polygons have inner boundaries that have a common point with each other or with the outer boundary. In this case, each loop formed where the boundary returns to the common point is treated as a separate boundary.
This polygon has an outer boundary (ABCDEA) and two inner boundaries (AHGFA and GKJIG).