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IGES

The Initial Graphics Exchange Specification (IGES) is a vendor-neutral file format that allows the digital exchange of information among computer-aided design (CAD) systems. It's an ASCII-based textual format.[1]: 59 

Logo of the IGES Project from NIST

The official title of IGES is Digital Representation for Communication of Product Definition Data, first published in March, 1980 by the U.S. National Bureau of Standards as NBSIR 80-1978.[2] Many documents (like early versions of the Defense Standards MIL-PRF-28000[3] and MIL-STD-1840[4]) referred to it as ASME Y14.26M, the designation of the ANSI committee that approved IGES Version 1.0.

Using IGES, a CAD user can exchange product data models in the form of circuit diagrams, wireframe, freeform surface or solid modeling representations. Applications supported by IGES include traditional engineering drawings, models for analysis, and other manufacturing functions.

History

IGES was an initiative of the United States Air Force (USAF) Integrated Computer Aided Manufacturing (ICAM) project (1976-1984).[5]

ICAM sought to develop procedures (IDEF) processes (Group Technology) and software (CAD/CAM) that would integrate all operations in Aerospace manufacturing and thus greatly reduce costs. Earlier the USAF Manufacturing Technology Program had funded the Automatically Programmed Tools (APT) language for programming Numerically Controlled (NC) machine tools. To close the data gap between parts design and manufacturing, one of the ICAM goals was to develop CAD software that would automatically generate numerical control programs for the very complex Computer Numerically Controlled (CNC) machine tools used throughout the Aerospace industry. A serious issue was the incompatibility of data produced by the many CAD systems in use at the time. USAF/ICAM called a meeting at the National Bureau of Standards (now known as National Institute of Standards and Technology or NIST) in 1978 to address this issue. Boeing offered to sell its CAD translation software to USAF for one United States dollar. USAF accepted this offer and contracted NIST to bring together a group of users and vendors, including Boeing, General Electric, Xerox, Computervision, Applicon and others to further develop and test this software. Though it was the practice to begin the name of ICAM developments with the word integrated (for example the IDEFs) believing that there would be rapid development of graphical exchange software, USAF decided that the IGES would be the Initial Graphics Exchange Specification not the Integrated Graphics Exchange Specification.

Since 1988, the DoD has required that all digital product and manufacturing information (PMI) for weapons systems contracts (the engineering drawings, circuit diagrams, etc.) be delivered in electronic form such as IGES format. As a consequence, CAx software vendors who want to market their products to DoD subcontractors and their partners needed to support the import (reading) and export (writing) of IGES format files.

An ANSI standard since 1980, IGES has been used in the automotive, aerospace, and shipbuilding industries. It has been used for weapons systems from Trident missile guidance systems to entire aircraft carriers. These part models may have to be used years after the vendor of the original design system has gone out of business. IGES files provide a way to access this data decades from now. Today, plugin viewers for Web browsers allow IGES files created 20 years ago to be viewed from anywhere in the world.[6]

After the initial release of STEP (ISO 10303) in 1994, interest in further development of IGES declined, and Version 5.3 (1996) was the last published standard.

File format

An IGES file is composed of 80-character ASCII records, a record length derived from the punched card era. Text strings are represented in "Hollerith" format, the number of characters in the string, followed by the letter "H", followed by the text string, e.g., "4HSLOT" (this is the text string format used in early versions of the Fortran language). Early IGES translators had problems with IBM mainframe computers because the mainframes used EBCDIC encoding for text, and some EBCDIC-ASCII translators would either substitute the wrong character, or improperly set the parity bit, causing a misread.

Here is a very small IGES file from 1987,[7] containing only two POINT (Type 116), two CIRCULAR ARC (Type 100), and two LINE (Type 110) entities. It represents a slot, with the points at the centers of the two half-circles that form the ends of the slot, and the two lines that form the sides.

 S 1 1H,,1H;,4HSLOT,37H$1$DUA2:[IGESLIB.BDRAFT.B2I]SLOT.IGS;, G 1 17HBravo3 BravoDRAFT,31HBravo3->IGES V3.002 (02-Oct-87),32,38,6,38,15, G 2 4HSLOT,1.,1,4HINCH,8,0.08,13H871006.192927,1.E-06,6., G 3 31HD. A. Harrod, Tel. 313/995-6333,24HAPPLICON - Ann Arbor, MI,4,0; G 4 116 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 1 116 1 5 1 0 0D 2 116 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 3 116 1 5 1 0 0D 4 100 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 5 100 1 2 1 0 0D 6 100 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 7 100 1 2 1 0 0D 8 110 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 9 110 1 3 1 0 0D 10 110 6 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 11 110 1 3 1 0 0D 12 116,0.,0.,0.,0,0,0; 1P 1 116,5.,0.,0.,0,0,0; 3P 2 100,0.,0.,0.,0.,1.,0.,-1.,0,0; 5P 3 100,0.,5.,0.,5.,-1.,5.,1.,0,0; 7P 4 110,0.,-1.,0.,5.,-1.,0.,0,0; 9P 5 110,0.,1.,0.,5.,1.,0.,0,0; 11P 6 S 1G 4D 12P 6 T 1 

The file is divided into 5 sections: Start, Global, Directory Entry, Parameter Data, and Terminate indicated by the characters S, G, D, P, or T in column 73. The characteristics and geometric information for an entity is split between two sections; one in a two record, fixed-length format (the Directory Entry, or DE Section), the other in a multiple record, comma delimited format (the Parameter Data, or PD Section), as can be seen in a more human-readable representation of the file.[8]

When displayed, the user should see two yellow points (hard to see on a white background, but most CAD systems use a black background), one located at the origin of model space [0,0,0], two red circular arcs, and two green lines.

 

Foreign-language support

 
fc2001x.igs is an example IGES file that demonstrates Font Code 2001 (Kanji)

Due to its growing international popularity (several countries, including Australia and the UK, adopted IGES as their own National Standards for PMI interoperability), support was added to the TEXT (Type 212) entity to support the ISO 8859 (Latin-1) alphabet for European characters.[9]

In the 1990s, IGES added support for the JIS encoding for Kanji (漢字) as double-byte characters (JIS-6226), allowing members of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association (JAMA) to exchange part models with their American and European partners without loss of the Kanji text.

The current version of IGES does not support Unicode 16- or 32-bit character encoding, so Arabic and other scripts (like Thai) cannot be represented.[10]

A recursive standard

One of the unique features of the IGES standard is that it was the first ANSI standard to be documented using itself. Since Version 4.0, all of the technical illustrations for the printed version of the standard have been generated from IGES files. The electronic publishing system (LaTeX) integrates raster images generated from IGES files into the PostScript sent to the laser printer, so text and images are printed on the same page for subsequent use as camera-ready copy for commercial publication. Beginning with IGES Version 5.2, this is how the standard was generated, and Version 5.3 (the most recent ANSI-approved version) is available as a PDF document.[11]

Many of the illustrations (all of which conform to the Defense Department's MIL-D-28000 Engineering Drawings Subset of IGES) use the entities that they describe, e.g., the illustration of the LEADER (ARROW) ENTITY (Type 214) can be used as a test case for translator implementers, because it contains all 12 arrow head styles defined by the standard. These WYSIWYG example files can be distinguished by a leading "F" and trailing "X" in the file name (like f214x.igs[12]), and this library is called the IGES X-files by members of the IGES community.

Here is one of the example figures, Figure 2 from Appendix A (fmeparte.igs[13]), that has appeared in every version of IGES since Version 3.0. It uses linear, angular, and ordinate dimension entities, as well as examples of both circular and conic arcs. It is usually the first part used when testing an IGES translator, because the standard has a picture of what it should look like.

 

See also

References

  1. ^ Schoonmaker, Stephen J. (2003). The CAD guidebook : a basic manual for understanding and improving computer-aided design. New York: Marcel Dekker. ISBN 0-8247-4569-8. OCLC 54090798.
  2. ^ Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES Version 1.0, Roger N. Nagel, Ph.D., Project Manager Walt W. Braithwaite, M.S., Boeing Philip R Kennicott, Ph.D., General Electric, National Bureau of Standards, NBSIR 80-1978, March 1980
  3. ^ "MIL-PRF-28000B". everyspec.com. 2011-05-26.
  4. ^ "MIL-STD-1840C". everyspec.com. 2011-05-26.
  5. ^ "IGES". PC Magazine.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
  7. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-08-15. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  8. ^ . Archived from the original on 2012-09-26. Retrieved 2010-08-16.
  9. ^ "MISC - IGES Example File font3001".
  10. ^ But see IGES RFC 603, "MSID Standards Activities". Archived from the original on 2012-07-19. Retrieved 2011-10-01. that proposes flagged UTF-8.
  11. ^ (PDF). US Product Data Association. 1996-09-23. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-08-21. Retrieved 2007-07-28.
  12. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-03-01. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-02-28. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
Notes
  • Nagel, Roger N.; Braithwaite, Walt W.; Kennicott, Philip R. (1980), Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES, Version 1.0, Washington DC: National Bureau of Standards, NBSIR 80-1978
  • 1982 https://books.google.com/books/about/Digital_representation_for_communication.html?id=5LDgAAAAMAAJ
  • 1990 https://books.google.com/books/about/Digital_representation_for_communication.html?id=tyFZAAAAYAAJ
  • Digital Representation for Communication of Product Definition Data: IGES 5.2 (Initial Graphics Exchange Specification Version 5.2), US Product Data Association, November 1993, ISBN 978-1-88538900-8
  • IGES/PDES Organization (September 23, 1996), (PDF), N. Charleston, SC: U.S. Product Data Association, archived from the original (PDF) on August 21, 2012, Formerly an ANSI Standard September 23, 1996 – September 2006
  • IGES/PDES Organization (June 28, 2006), The Initial Graphics Exchange Specification (IGES) Version 5.x (Draft), IGES/PDES Organization. Baseline version was January 12, 1999.
  • IGES/PDES Organization (November 30, 2001), The Initial Graphics Exchange Specification (IGES) Version 6.0 (Draft). Baseline version was January 5, 1998.

External links

  • . nist.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-04-17.

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The Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES is a vendor neutral file format that allows the digital exchange of information among computer aided design CAD systems It s an ASCII based textual format 1 59 Logo of the IGES Project from NIST The official title of IGES is Digital Representation for Communication of Product Definition Data first published in March 1980 by the U S National Bureau of Standards as NBSIR 80 1978 2 Many documents like early versions of the Defense Standards MIL PRF 28000 3 and MIL STD 1840 4 referred to it as ASME Y14 26M the designation of the ANSI committee that approved IGES Version 1 0 Using IGES a CAD user can exchange product data models in the form of circuit diagrams wireframe freeform surface or solid modeling representations Applications supported by IGES include traditional engineering drawings models for analysis and other manufacturing functions Contents 1 History 2 File format 3 Foreign language support 4 A recursive standard 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditIGES was an initiative of the United States Air Force USAF Integrated Computer Aided Manufacturing ICAM project 1976 1984 5 ICAM sought to develop procedures IDEF processes Group Technology and software CAD CAM that would integrate all operations in Aerospace manufacturing and thus greatly reduce costs Earlier the USAF Manufacturing Technology Program had funded the Automatically Programmed Tools APT language for programming Numerically Controlled NC machine tools To close the data gap between parts design and manufacturing one of the ICAM goals was to develop CAD software that would automatically generate numerical control programs for the very complex Computer Numerically Controlled CNC machine tools used throughout the Aerospace industry A serious issue was the incompatibility of data produced by the many CAD systems in use at the time USAF ICAM called a meeting at the National Bureau of Standards now known as National Institute of Standards and Technology or NIST in 1978 to address this issue Boeing offered to sell its CAD translation software to USAF for one United States dollar USAF accepted this offer and contracted NIST to bring together a group of users and vendors including Boeing General Electric Xerox Computervision Applicon and others to further develop and test this software Though it was the practice to begin the name of ICAM developments with the word integrated for example the IDEFs believing that there would be rapid development of graphical exchange software USAF decided that the IGES would be the Initial Graphics Exchange Specification not the Integrated Graphics Exchange Specification Since 1988 the DoD has required that all digital product and manufacturing information PMI for weapons systems contracts the engineering drawings circuit diagrams etc be delivered in electronic form such as IGES format As a consequence CAx software vendors who want to market their products to DoD subcontractors and their partners needed to support the import reading and export writing of IGES format files An ANSI standard since 1980 IGES has been used in the automotive aerospace and shipbuilding industries It has been used for weapons systems from Trident missile guidance systems to entire aircraft carriers These part models may have to be used years after the vendor of the original design system has gone out of business IGES files provide a way to access this data decades from now Today plugin viewers for Web browsers allow IGES files created 20 years ago to be viewed from anywhere in the world 6 After the initial release of STEP ISO 10303 in 1994 interest in further development of IGES declined and Version 5 3 1996 was the last published standard File format EditAn IGES file is composed of 80 character ASCII records a record length derived from the punched card era Text strings are represented in Hollerith format the number of characters in the string followed by the letter H followed by the text string e g 4HSLOT this is the text string format used in early versions of the Fortran language Early IGES translators had problems with IBM mainframe computers because the mainframes used EBCDIC encoding for text and some EBCDIC ASCII translators would either substitute the wrong character or improperly set the parity bit causing a misread Here is a very small IGES file from 1987 7 containing only two POINT Type 116 two CIRCULAR ARC Type 100 and two LINE Type 110 entities It represents a slot with the points at the centers of the two half circles that form the ends of the slot and the two lines that form the sides S 1 1H 1H 4HSLOT 37H 1 DUA2 IGESLIB BDRAFT B2I SLOT IGS G 1 17HBravo3 BravoDRAFT 31HBravo3 gt IGES V3 002 02 Oct 87 32 38 6 38 15 G 2 4HSLOT 1 1 4HINCH 8 0 08 13H871006 192927 1 E 06 6 G 3 31HD A Harrod Tel 313 995 6333 24HAPPLICON Ann Arbor MI 4 0 G 4 116 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 1 116 1 5 1 0 0D 2 116 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 3 116 1 5 1 0 0D 4 100 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 5 100 1 2 1 0 0D 6 100 4 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 7 100 1 2 1 0 0D 8 110 5 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 9 110 1 3 1 0 0D 10 110 6 0 1 0 0 0 0 1D 11 110 1 3 1 0 0D 12 116 0 0 0 0 0 0 1P 1 116 5 0 0 0 0 0 3P 2 100 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 5P 3 100 0 5 0 5 1 5 1 0 0 7P 4 110 0 1 0 5 1 0 0 0 9P 5 110 0 1 0 5 1 0 0 0 11P 6 S 1G 4D 12P 6 T 1The file is divided into 5 sections Start Global Directory Entry Parameter Data and Terminate indicated by the characters S G D P or T in column 73 The characteristics and geometric information for an entity is split between two sections one in a two record fixed length format the Directory Entry or DE Section the other in a multiple record comma delimited format the Parameter Data or PD Section as can be seen in a more human readable representation of the file 8 When displayed the user should see two yellow points hard to see on a white background but most CAD systems use a black background one located at the origin of model space 0 0 0 two red circular arcs and two green lines Foreign language support Edit fc2001x igs is an example IGES file that demonstrates Font Code 2001 Kanji Due to its growing international popularity several countries including Australia and the UK adopted IGES as their own National Standards for PMI interoperability support was added to the TEXT Type 212 entity to support the ISO 8859 Latin 1 alphabet for European characters 9 In the 1990s IGES added support for the JIS encoding for Kanji 漢字 as double byte characters JIS 6226 allowing members of the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association JAMA to exchange part models with their American and European partners without loss of the Kanji text The current version of IGES does not support Unicode 16 or 32 bit character encoding so Arabic and other scripts like Thai cannot be represented 10 A recursive standard EditOne of the unique features of the IGES standard is that it was the first ANSI standard to be documented using itself Since Version 4 0 all of the technical illustrations for the printed version of the standard have been generated from IGES files The electronic publishing system LaTeX integrates raster images generated from IGES files into the PostScript sent to the laser printer so text and images are printed on the same page for subsequent use as camera ready copy for commercial publication Beginning with IGES Version 5 2 this is how the standard was generated and Version 5 3 the most recent ANSI approved version is available as a PDF document 11 Many of the illustrations all of which conform to the Defense Department s MIL D 28000 Engineering Drawings Subset of IGES use the entities that they describe e g the illustration of the LEADER ARROW ENTITY Type 214 can be used as a test case for translator implementers because it contains all 12 arrow head styles defined by the standard These WYSIWYG example files can be distinguished by a leading F and trailing X in the file name like f214x igs 12 and this library is called the IGES X files by members of the IGES community Here is one of the example figures Figure 2 from Appendix A fmeparte igs 13 that has appeared in every version of IGES since Version 3 0 It uses linear angular and ordinate dimension entities as well as examples of both circular and conic arcs It is usually the first part used when testing an IGES translator because the standard has a picture of what it should look like See also EditISO 10303 21References Edit Schoonmaker Stephen J 2003 The CAD guidebook a basic manual for understanding and improving computer aided design New York Marcel Dekker ISBN 0 8247 4569 8 OCLC 54090798 Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES Version 1 0 Roger N Nagel Ph D Project Manager Walt W Braithwaite M S Boeing Philip R Kennicott Ph D General Electric National Bureau of Standards NBSIR 80 1978 March 1980 MIL PRF 28000B everyspec com 2011 05 26 MIL STD 1840C everyspec com 2011 05 26 IGES PC Magazine Rotate an IGES part from 1990 with Java Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 MISC IGES Example File slot Archived from the original on 2010 08 15 Retrieved 2010 01 08 MISC IGES Example File slot dump Archived from the original on 2012 09 26 Retrieved 2010 08 16 MISC IGES Example File font3001 But see IGES RFC 603 MSID Standards Activities Archived from the original on 2012 07 19 Retrieved 2011 10 01 that proposes flagged UTF 8 IGES 5 3 ANSI 1996 PDF US Product Data Association 1996 09 23 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 08 21 Retrieved 2007 07 28 WYSIWYG IGES Example File f214x Archived from the original on 2010 03 01 Retrieved 2010 01 08 MISC IGES Example File figa2 Archived from the original on 2010 02 28 Retrieved 2010 01 08 NotesNagel Roger N Braithwaite Walt W Kennicott Philip R 1980 Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES Version 1 0 Washington DC National Bureau of Standards NBSIR 80 1978 1982 https books google com books about Digital representation for communication html id 5LDgAAAAMAAJ 1990 https books google com books about Digital representation for communication html id tyFZAAAAYAAJ Digital Representation for Communication of Product Definition Data IGES 5 2 Initial Graphics Exchange Specification Version 5 2 US Product Data Association November 1993 ISBN 978 1 88538900 8 IGES PDES Organization September 23 1996 Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES 5 3 PDF N Charleston SC U S Product Data Association archived from the original PDF on August 21 2012 Formerly an ANSI Standard September 23 1996 September 2006 IGES PDES Organization June 28 2006 The Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES Version 5 x Draft IGES PDES Organization Baseline version was January 12 1999 IGES PDES Organization November 30 2001 The Initial Graphics Exchange Specification IGES Version 6 0 Draft Baseline version was January 5 1998 External links Edit A General Description of IGES nist gov Archived from the original on 2012 04 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title IGES amp oldid 1124646131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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