A guard is a condition or restriction expressed in natural language text or in a machine readable language that must be fulfilled for a transition to become possible.
The name of the item.
A keyword is a lightweight variant of a stereotype to extend the semantics of a model element. As opposite of stereotypes, keywords does not have do be defined in a profile.
If several keywords are given, they should be separated by commas.
A stereotype defines how a model element may be extended, and enables the use of platform or domain specific terminology or notation in place of, or in addition to, the ones used for the extended metaclass.
Stereotypes should be given in the format 'profile::stererotype'. Stereotypes should be separated by commas.
A textual description of the element.
Determines where the item appears within different Namespaces within the overall model, and its accessibility.
The specification of the guard. The language that is used should be specified in the language property.
The language used in the guard specification, for example OCL.
An element of one of the following kinds:
A protocol transition specifies a legal transition for an operation.
Transitions of protocol state machines have the following information: a pre condition (guard), on trigger, and a post condition.
Every protocol transition is associated to zero or one operation (referred BehavioralFeature) that belongs to the context classifier of the protocol state machine.
A transition is a directed relationship between a source vertex and a target vertex.
It may be part of a compound transition, which takes the state machine from one state configuration to another, representing the complete response of the state machine to an occurrence of an event of a particular type.
An abstraction is a relationship that relates two elements or sets of elements that represent the same concept at different levels of abstraction or from different viewpoints.
A dependency is a relationship that signifies that a single or a set of model elements requires other model elements for their specification or implementation.
This means that the complete semantics of the depending elements is either semantically or structurally dependent on the definition of the supplier element(s).
An information flow specifies that one or more information items circulates from its sources to its targets.
Informationflows require some kind of information channel for transmitting information items from the source to the destination. An information channel is represented in various ways depending on the nature of its sources and targets. It may berepresented by connectors, links, associations, or even dependencies.
For example, if the source and destination are partsin some composite structure such as a collaboration, then the information channel is likely to be represented by aconnector between them. Or, if the source and target are objects (which are a kind of instance specification), they may berepresented by a link that joins the two, and so on.
Realization is a specialized abstraction relationship between two sets of model elements, one representing a specification (the supplier) and the other represents an implementation of the latter (the client). Realization can be used to model stepwise refinement, optimizations, transformations, templates, model synthesis, framework composition, etc.
A substitution is a relationship between two classifiers signifies that the substituting classifier complies with the contract specified by the contract classifier. This implies that instances of the substituting classifier are runtime substitutable where instances of the contract classifier are expected.
A usage is a relationship in which one element requires another element (or set of elements) for its full implementation or operation. A usage is a dependency in which the client requires the presence of the supplier.
Model Guidelines generated by ![]() ![]() | Tuesday, 14 February 2017 15:17 |