<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes" ?> <dspl targetNamespace="http://www.google.com/publicdata/dataset/google/time" xmlns="http://schemas.google.com/dspl/2010"> <info> <name> <value xml:lang="en">Google date and time</value> </name> <description> <value xml:lang="en">Google date and time dataset</value> </description> <url> <value xml:lang="en">http://code.google.com/apis/publicdata/docs/canonical/time.html</value> </url> </info> <provider> <name><value xml:lang="en">Google Inc.</value></name> <description><value xml:lang="en">Google Inc.</value></description> <url><value xml:lang="en">http://www.google.com</value></url> </provider> <concepts> <concept id="time_point"> <info> <name><value>Point in time</value></name> <description><value>Point in time, with a given granularity.</value></description> </info> <type ref="date"/> <attribute concept="granularity"/> </concept> <concept id="year" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Year date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with yearly granularity. The year concept is usually used directly in a slice definition to define a dimension that contains year. For example, a slice for yearly population by country would be defined as follows: <![CDATA[<slices> <slice id="country_slice"> <dimension concept="country"/> <dimension concept="time:year"/> <metric concept="population"/> <table ref="country_slice_table"/> </slice> </slices>]]> The table definition for this slice would be defined as follows: <![CDATA[<tables> ... <table id="country_slice_table"> <column id="country" type="text"/> <column id="year" type="date" format="yyyy"/> <column id="population" type="integer"/> <data> <file format="csv" encoding="utf-8">country_slice.csv</file> </data> </table> ... </tables>]]> And the data contained in the CSV file for this table would look like: country, year, population AF, 1960, 9616353 AF, 1961, 9799379 AF, 1962, 9989846 AF, 1963, 10188299 ... </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>YEARLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="quarter" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Quarter date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with quarterly granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>QUARTERLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="month" extends="time_point"> <info> <name> <value xml:lang="en">Month date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with monthly granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>MONTHLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="week" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Week date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with weekly granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>WEEKLY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="day" extends="time_point"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Day date</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> A date with daily granularity. See the example for the year concept above. </value> </description> </info> <attribute id="granularity"> <value>DAILY</value> </attribute> </concept> <concept id="granularity"> <info> <name><value xml:lang="en">Granularity</value></name> <description> <value xml:lang="en"> Granularity of time, i.e., the uncertainty that a point in time may be anywhere within some time interval. </value> </description> </info> <type ref="string"/> <table ref="granularity_table"/> </concept> </concepts> <tables> <table id="granularity_table"> <column id="granularity" type="string" /> <data> <file format="csv" encoding="utf-8">granularity.csv</file> </data> </table> </tables> </dspl>
time.xml
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Ultimo aggiornamento 2025-07-25 UTC.
[[["Facile da capire","easyToUnderstand","thumb-up"],["Il problema è stato risolto","solvedMyProblem","thumb-up"],["Altra","otherUp","thumb-up"]],[["Mancano le informazioni di cui ho bisogno","missingTheInformationINeed","thumb-down"],["Troppo complicato/troppi passaggi","tooComplicatedTooManySteps","thumb-down"],["Obsoleti","outOfDate","thumb-down"],["Problema di traduzione","translationIssue","thumb-down"],["Problema relativo a esempi/codice","samplesCodeIssue","thumb-down"],["Altra","otherDown","thumb-down"]],["Ultimo aggiornamento 2025-07-25 UTC."],[],["This document defines the \"Google date and time\" dataset, detailing time-related concepts and their granularities. Core concepts include `time_point`, `year`, `quarter`, `month`, `week`, `day`, and `granularity`. Each time concept extends `time_point` and specifies its granularity (e.g., `YEARLY`, `QUARTERLY`). The `year` concept demonstrates how to define a slice for yearly data and how related data is formatted within CSV files, like a country's population per year. A table is defined to map granularities.\n"]]