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New book explains how to effectively and successfully apply UML

Jul 21, 2003 — by LinuxDevices Staff — from the LinuxDevices Archive — views

O'Reilly publishing announced the release of a new book, Learning UML, about the Unified Modeling Language (UML), a visual language which is used for modeling and communicating about software systems.

“Using diagrams and supporting text as a means of communication, the UML makes it possible for team members to collaborate to successfully develop systems,” O'Reilly said. “Seemingly simple, UML is a rich and expressive language, and is quickly becoming an industry standard for specifying and documenting software systems, endorsed by almost every maker of software development products.”

Unlike much of the documentation about UML that focuses on methodology or process without offering a clear understanding of how the language works, Learning UML focuses instead on teaching how to effectively and successfully apply the UML, O'Reilly said.

Continuing from O'Reilly's description of the book . . .

Readers begin by learning how UML is used to model the structure of a system. Many key UML concepts, especially that of the general (classes) versus the specific (objects), are illustrated in the chapter on class and object diagrams. Next, readers learn how to use use-case diagrams to model the functionality of a system. Finally, they learn how component and deployment diagrams are used to model the way in which a system is deployed in a physical environment.

Each chapter in “Learning UML” uses an example-driven approach to progressively introduce key UML concepts with increasingly more involved examples. Using a project-management system case study, the book guides the reader though learning how to read, understand, write, and apply the UML. Exercises are included so readers can practice and improve their skills.

According to Sinan Si Alhir, the book's author, when readers have finished Learning UML, they will understand how to use the various UML diagrams and their elements based on what they want to communicate and what each diagram emphasizes. “They will also have gained insight into the rationale behind the language and how different pieces of the language fit together,” says Alhir, “rather than be left with the perception that the UML is a hodgepodge of different types of diagrams without any underlying scheme. They'll generally be able to more effectually and successfully apply the UML.”

“Learning UML” is for anyone interested in learning to understand and apply the UML, including analysts and end users who specify requirements, architects who broadly design systems that satisfy requirements, designers who detail designs, developers who implement designs, testers who verify and validate systems against requirements, and managers who orchestrate system development efforts — no specific prior knowledge or skills are assumed, O'Reilly said.

Chapter 8, “Activity Diagrams,” is available for free online access, here.

Summary:

    Learning UML, by Sinan Si Alhir
    ISBN 0-596-00344-7, 234 pages, $34.95 US, $54.95 CA, 24.95 UK

 
This article was originally published on LinuxDevices.com and has been donated to the open source community by QuinStreet Inc. Please visit LinuxToday.com for up-to-date news and articles about Linux and open source.



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