ISO 10628
ISO 10628 Diagrams for the chemical and petrochemical industry specifies the classification, content, and representation of flow diagrams. It does not apply to electrical engineering diagrams. ISO 10628 consists of the following parts:
- Part 1: Specification of Diagrams (ISO 10628-1:2014)[1]
- Part 2: Graphical Symbols (ISO 10628-2:2012)
This document supersedes ISO 10628:2000 and ISO 10628:1997.[2]
History
General principles
common elements of flow charts consist of:
- Block diagrams
- Process flow diagrams
- Piping and instrumentation diagrams (P&ID)
gollark: With special hardware at junctions, a coordination server, and a bit of powered rail, it should be possible to use just 1 or 2 tracks per road and send carts anywhere, with fully passive (computerless) carts.
gollark: I thought about doing it in Chorus City, but it wouldn't make much sense since that's quite small.
gollark: Is there a way to get stuff installed under Switch City streets? I had a really cool idea for a routed rail transport system.
gollark: Besides, there are only 12.
gollark: PotatOS is very efficient.
See also
- Process flow diagram
- ISO 14617, Graphical symbols for diagrams
- ISO 15519, Specification for diagrams for process industry
Notes and references
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.