+
+@code{name} is the name of the category (or group).
+
+@code{category} can represent a terminal category. In that case,
+@code{index} is a nonnegative integer less than @code{n-categories} in
+the @code{dimension} in which the @code{category} is nested (directly
+or indirectly).
+
+Alternatively, @code{category} can represent a @code{group} of nested
+categories:
+
+@example
+group := (00 | 01)[merge] 00 01 (i0 | i2)[data]
+ i-1 int[n-subcategories] category*[n-subcategories]
+@end example
+
+Ordinarily a group has some nested content, so that
+@code{n-subcategories} is positive, but a few instances of groups with
+@code{n-subcategories} 0 has been observed.
+
+If @code{merge} is 00, the most common value, then the group is really
+a distinct group that should be represented as such in the visual
+representation and user interface. If @code{merge} is 01, however,
+the categories in this group should be shown and treated as if they
+were direct children of the group's parent group (or if it has no
+parent group, then direct children of the dimension), and this group's
+name is irrelevant and should not be displayed. (Merged groups can be
+nested!)
+
+@code{data} appears to be i2 when all of the categories within a group
+are terminal categories that directly represent data values for a
+variable (e.g. in a frequency table or crosstabulation, a group of
+values in a variable being tabulated) and i0 otherwise, but this might
+be naive.
+
+@example
+data := int[layers] int[rows] int[columns] int*[n-dimensions]
+ int[n-data] datum*[n-data]
+@end example
+
+The values of @code{layers}, @code{rows}, and @code{columns} each
+specifies the number of dimensions represented in layers or rows or
+columns, respectively, and their values sum to the number of
+dimensions.
+
+The @code{n-dimensions} integers are a permutation of the 0-based
+dimension numbers. The first @code{layers} of them specify each of
+the dimensions represented by layers, the next @code{rows} of them
+specify the dimensions represented by rows, and the final
+@code{columns} of them specify the dimensions represented by columns.
+When there is more than one dimension of a given kind, the inner
+dimensions are given first.
+
+@example
+datum := int64[index] 00? value @r{# Version 1.}
+datum := int64[index] value @r{# Version 3.}
+@end example
+
+A datum consists of an index and a value. Suppose there are @math{d}
+dimensions and dimension @math{i} for @math{0 \le i < d} has
+@math{n_i} categories. Consider the datum at coordinates @math{x_i}
+for @math{0 \le i < d}; note that @math{0 \le x_i < n_i}. Then the
+index is calculated by the following algorithm:
+
+@display
+let index = 0
+for each @math{i} from 0 to @math{d - 1}:
+ index = @math{n_i \times} index + @math{x_i}
+@end display
+
+For example, suppose there are 3 dimensions with 3, 4, and 5
+categories, respectively. The datum at coordinates (1, 2, 3) has
+index @math{5 \times (4 \times (3 \times 0 + 1) + 2) + 3 = 33}.
+
+The format of a datum varies slightly from version 1 to version 3, in
+that version 1 has an extra optional 00 byte.