Hi Pevac, and welcome to the wonderful world of GD&T! I've been studying GD&T for the last 5 or so years, and recently certified as GD&T Professional - Senior Level (GDTP-S) for ASME Y14.5M-1994.
To Ringman's last comment, unfortunately there are many GD&T standards out there. A while back (1960's?) the Canadian, British, Australian, ANSI and US MilSpec recognized critical consistencies between their individual standards and developed jointly the ANSI Y14.5 standard. ASME took over the ANSI Y14.5 standard in 1982(?) and metricized it for the 1994 release (hence the "M" in Y14.5M-1994). ASME is based in physical reality rather than numerical / computational theory.
Now consider the ISO (International Standards Organization) GD&T system which Europe has "officially" adopted. It is significantly the same, but with critical differences on how datums and such can be defined. Too big a topic to get into here, but as I understand it, ASME Y14.5M-1994 outsold the ISO equivalents in Europe for the last couple of years, so it's growing over there too. While ASME has a few relevant standards to cover all of the GD&T fields, ISO sells individual documents for each section, which results in a major cost.
There is also the Japanese Industrial Technology (JIT) version of GD&T...I don't know much about that system, but it makes my friends in the auto parts industries go pretty much nuts.
I was involved in a significant project to implement GD&T into a group of 3 business units in 3 countries. First, we had to fight a "customized" version of GD&T which was used by another couple of our business units, and consisted of elements of ISO, ASME, and some home-grown stuff. It was confusing to say the least, and impossible to apply or defend in practice. Our triad selected and defended ASME Y14.5M-1994 largely due to some major counselling/coaching from a training supplier. We managed to convert all of the other (5) business units based on the merit of the standard. The "trick" was to anticipate what problems / objections would arise, then get the designers to understand before overwhelming management with such a radical change.
You can get the Y14.5M standard online from ASME using this link
It's $135 USD.
Once you start reading it, you'll quickly understand that you,too, may need some good coaching. I can give good references for that.
Good luck & stay the course...it's worth it.