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* ISO/IEC DIS 8652 and ISO/IEC DIS 14519-1
@ 1994-09-15  5:27 Erik Naggum
  1994-09-15  8:48 ` David Emery
  1994-09-16 17:23 ` Tucker Taft
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 6+ messages in thread
From: Erik Naggum @ 1994-09-15  5:27 UTC (permalink / raw)


INTRODUCTORY REMARKS

as a consultant to the Norwegian Standards Organization on matters of
ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22 (although my "home committee" is SC 18), I receive some
funny things in the mail.  in this case, it may be very serious.

voting on ISO/IEC DIS 8652, ISO-speak for "Ada9X", terminates 1994-10-30,
and it is expected that progression to IS will be expeditious.

meanwhile, IEEE standard 1003.5-1992 is being fast-tracked as ISO/IEC DIS
14519-1, on which voting began 1994-08-25 and terminates 1995-02-25.  IEEE
1003.5 is better known as POSIX.5, its full name being

    IEEE Standard for Information Technology --
    POSIX Ada Language Interfaces --
    Part 1: Binding for System Application Program Interface (API)

it was approved by the IEEE Standards Board 1992-06-18.  the "fast-track
procedure" takes an existing standard from some member body or category A
liaison and asks ISO to rubber-stamp it by vote from its member bodies.
IEEE is such a category A liaison, and IEEE 1003 is generally being
fast-tracked into various parts of ISO/IEC 9945, with Ada bindings
apparently findings its place as ISO/IEC 14519.

1003.5 is a binding to Ada 83 (ISO 8652:1987).  it is not unlikely that the
second edition of ISO 8652 (Ada9X) will be published or at least approved
for publication before voting on this standard terminates.


PROBLEM

I am in a difficult position, as I think most other SC 22 members and
consultants are, whether I shall recommend to disapprove this DIS on
grounds of impending revision of one of its base standard, or to proceed
with the rubber-stamping procedure in the hopes that a revised version will
eventually come along, and that an Ada 83 binding is more important than no
binding.  that this is an IEEE standard already diminishes the importance
of the latter point to near zero in my eyes.

what does the Ada community think?  I am not in position to appreciate the
consequences of either choice, and do not know whether this draft standard
should be progressed, and would like to avoid an embarrassing mistake of
helping to approve a standard that will be obsolete by the time its ink
dries.

I do not understand why IEEE decides to fast-track this standard now that
Ada is in the final stages of its revision, so if anybody knows this,
please let me know.

your advice is greatly appreciated.

#<Erik>
--
Microsoft is not the answer.  Microsoft is the question.  NO is the answer.



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 6+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~1994-09-16 18:03 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 6+ messages (download: mbox.gz / follow: Atom feed)
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
1994-09-15  5:27 ISO/IEC DIS 8652 and ISO/IEC DIS 14519-1 Erik Naggum
1994-09-15  8:48 ` David Emery
1994-09-15 21:16   ` Mats Weber
1994-09-16 16:41   ` Erik Naggum
1994-09-16 17:23 ` Tucker Taft
1994-09-16 18:03   ` Erik Naggum

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