Results 71 to 80 of about 109 (106)
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Journal of Systems and Software, 2006
Stereotypes were introduced into the Unified Modeling Language to provide means of customizing this general purpose modeling language for its usage in specific application domains. The primary role of stereotypes is to brand an existing model element with specific semantics, but stereotypes can also be used to provide means of a secondary ...
Miroslaw Staron +2 more
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Stereotypes were introduced into the Unified Modeling Language to provide means of customizing this general purpose modeling language for its usage in specific application domains. The primary role of stereotypes is to brand an existing model element with specific semantics, but stereotypes can also be used to provide means of a secondary ...
Miroslaw Staron +2 more
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Mapping UML Web Navigation Stereotypes to XML Data Skeletons
2002Everyone who already experienced "getting lost" in a web site will agree that navigation support within such sites is a crucial topic in any but the most trivial web-based system. Modeling navigation links as special associations between classes in the UML let us arrive at the conclusion that class diagrams tend to become overloaded with links such ...
Georg Sonneck +2 more
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Evolution of XML schemas and documents from stereotyped UML class models: A traceable approach
Information and Software Technology, 2011Context: UML and XML are two of the most commonly used languages in software engineering processes. One of the most critical of these processes is that of model evolution and maintenance. More specifically, when an XML schema is modified, the changes should be propagated to the corresponding XML documents, which must conform with the new, modified ...
Eladio Domínguez +5 more
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2008
The main goal of this paper is to provide empirical evidence, through a controlled experiment, of the influence of stereotypes when modelers, developers, and maintainers have to comprehend UML sequence diagrams. The comprehension of UML sequence diagrams with and without stereotypes was analyzed from three different perspectives: semantic comprehension,
Marcela Genero +5 more
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The main goal of this paper is to provide empirical evidence, through a controlled experiment, of the influence of stereotypes when modelers, developers, and maintainers have to comprehend UML sequence diagrams. The comprehension of UML sequence diagrams with and without stereotypes was analyzed from three different perspectives: semantic comprehension,
Marcela Genero +5 more
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Proceedings IEEE Symposia on Human-Centric Computing Languages and Environments (Cat. No.01TH8587), 2002
Stereotypes provide a mechanism for extending the vocabulary of the UML. Present UML-based formalisms for geographic information system use the concept of visual stereotypes in order to represent geographic types. This paper extends the expressiveness of stereotypes currently defined for geographic types and describes an algorithm for the computation ...
Pinet, François, Lbath, Ahmed
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Stereotypes provide a mechanism for extending the vocabulary of the UML. Present UML-based formalisms for geographic information system use the concept of visual stereotypes in order to represent geographic types. This paper extends the expressiveness of stereotypes currently defined for geographic types and describes an algorithm for the computation ...
Pinet, François, Lbath, Ahmed
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Use of UML Stereotypes in Business Models
2011This chapter presents some particularly useful UML stereotypes for use in business systems. Stereotypes are the core extension mechanism of UML. If you find that you need a modeling element or information extension to an element that is not in UML but it is similar to something that is, you treat your addition/extension as a stereotype.
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UCC: UML profile to cloud computing modeling: Using stereotypes and tag values
7'th International Symposium on Telecommunications (IST'2014), 2014Today cloud computing has become one of the common technologies that most of the companies want to migrate their legacy systems or deploy their new system to it. Besides modeling the system, software designers need to model the deployment infrastructure, which their system will be deployed on it.
Ali Kamali +2 more
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Business Model Application of UML Stereotypes
2005The UML (Unified Modeling Language) has become a standard in design of object oriented computer systems (Schach, 2004). UML provides for the use of stereotypes to extend the utility of its base capabilities. In the design and construction of business systems, the use of stereotypes is particularly useful stereotypes, and this article defines and ...
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IEEE Transactions on Software Engineering, 2010
In recent years, several design notations have been proposed to model domain-specific applications or reference architectures. In particular, Conallen has proposed the UML Web Application Extension (WAE): a UML extension to model Web applications. The aim of our empirical investigation is to test whether the usage of the Conallen notation supports ...
Filippo Ricca +4 more
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In recent years, several design notations have been proposed to model domain-specific applications or reference architectures. In particular, Conallen has proposed the UML Web Application Extension (WAE): a UML extension to model Web applications. The aim of our empirical investigation is to test whether the usage of the Conallen notation supports ...
Filippo Ricca +4 more
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Modeling interaction join point adaptations independent of pointcut models using UML stereotypes
Proceedings of the 13th workshop on Aspect-oriented modeling, 2009Several approaches to aspect-oriented modeling of interactions are based on modeling pointcuts that select join points (pointcut models) and modeling adaptations needed at those join points (adaptation models). A common limitation of most of these approaches is that they couple the two models together because identifiers in adaptation models reference ...
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