ISO/TC 10/SC 6/WG 21 - Classification of technical requirements
Classification des exigences techniques
General Information
Frequently Asked Questions
ISO/TC 10/SC 6/WG 21 is a Subcommittee within the International Organization for Standardization (ISO). It is named "Classification of technical requirements". This committee has published 1 standards.
ISO/TC 10/SC 6/WG 21 develops ISO standards in the area of Information technology. Currently, there are 1 published standards from this subcommittee.
The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) is an independent, non-governmental international organization that develops and publishes international standards. Founded in 1947 and headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, ISO brings together experts from 170+ member countries to share knowledge and develop voluntary, consensus-based standards that support innovation and provide solutions to global challenges.
A Subcommittee (SC) in ISO operates under a Technical Committee and focuses on a specific subset of the TC's scope. Subcommittees develop standards and technical specifications in their specialized area, reporting to their parent Technical Committee. They may also have working groups for detailed technical work.
This document specifies a framework for building systems for the classification of requirements. Such systems can be used to indicate requirements of special importance, and communicate them for production set-up, verification, audit, etc. This document: - gives background information why such systems are useful in many areas of manufacturing; - can be referred to for the concept of classification of requirements; - functions as a framework for applying such systems in technical product documentation (TPD); - indicates the needed elements for a classification system; - supports with aspects in the choice of symbols for a classification system. As a framework, this document does not give the details of a specific classification system. Instead, it functions as a basis for an organization-specific system which contains details such as notations and symbols, classification levels, assessment procedures, etc., including usage and interpretation in the TPD. This document does not specify the contractual consequences of a classification (e.g. needed actions such as choice of tools, reliability index or process capability for a classification level) nor other references to standards or documents for handling classifications and nonconformity to requirements.
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