Schaum's Outline of UML


Book Description

In the more than seven years since the Object Management Group (OMG) adopted the Unified Modeling Language (UML), UML has established itself as the de facto industry standard for modeling software systems In 2001 OMG put together a task force to revise UML Version 1.0. In March of 2003, UML Version 2.0 was finalized and rolled out to the 35 major companies participating in the adoption effort and made available to the public. This book provides a step-by-step guide to the notation and use of UML, one of the most widely used, object-oriented notation systems/programming languages in existence. The outline demonstrates the use of the techniques and notation of UML through case studies in systems analysis, showing the student clearly how UML is used in all kinds of practical situations. This revised edition will discuss the new infrastructure of the latest UML Version 2.0, and will include new examples, review questions, and notations.




Software Development with UML


Book Description

This is an introductory book to information modelling with UML, for entry level university students. It assumes no previous knowledge of UML on the part of the reader, and uses a case-based approach to present the material clearly and accessibly. It harmonises the UML notation with a full software development approach, from project conception through to testing, deployment and enhancement. The author is an experienced tutor, who also practices as a UML professional, and the cases are based upon his own experience. The book is accompanied by a website that provides solutions to end-of-chapter exercises, a password-protected tutor's file of further exercises with solutions, slides to accompany the book, and other support material. This book is suitable for all undergraduate computing and information systems, or Software Engineering courses. First year students will find it particulalry helpful for modules on systems development or analysis and design.




Shrinkwrap


Book Description




UML


Book Description




UML @ Classroom


Book Description

This textbook mainly addresses beginners and readers with a basic knowledge of object-oriented programming languages like Java or C#, but with little or no modeling or software engineering experience – thus reflecting the majority of students in introductory courses at universities. Using UML, it introduces basic modeling concepts in a highly precise manner, while refraining from the interpretation of rare special cases. After a brief explanation of why modeling is an indispensable part of software development, the authors introduce the individual diagram types of UML (the class and object diagram, the sequence diagram, the state machine diagram, the activity diagram, and the use case diagram), as well as their interrelationships, in a step-by-step manner. The topics covered include not only the syntax and the semantics of the individual language elements, but also pragmatic aspects, i.e., how to use them wisely at various stages in the software development process. To this end, the work is complemented with examples that were carefully selected for their educational and illustrative value. Overall, the book provides a solid foundation and deeper understanding of the most important object-oriented modeling concepts and their application in software development. An additional website offers a complete set of slides to aid in teaching the contents of the book, exercises and further e-learning material.




Learn UML in 24 Hours


Book Description

UML stands for Unified Modeling Language used for creating object-oriented, meaningful documentation models for any software system present. It provides us a way to develop rich models that describe the working of any software/hardware systems. UML serves a great way of creating professional documentation which is a necessary part of any project development. Here is what is covered in the book – Chapter 1: UML Diagrams: Versions, Types, History, Tools, Examples 1.What is UML? 2.Why use UML? Complete History 3.UML Versions 4.Characteristics of UML 5.Conceptual model 6.UML Diagrams 7.UML Tools Chapter 2: UML Notation Tutorial: Symbol with Examples 1.What is a model? 2.UML Building Blocks 3.Things 4.Relationships 5.Diagrams Chapter 3: UML Relationships with EXAMPLE: Dependency, Generalization, Realization 1.Association 2.Dependency 3.Generalization 4.Realization 5.Composition 6.Aggregation Chapter 4: UML Association vs Aggregation vs Composition with EXAMPLE 1.Association 2.Composition 3.Aggregation 4.Association vs. Aggregation vs. Composition Chapter 5: UML Class Diagram Tutorial with Examples 1.What is Class? 2.What is Class Diagram? 3.Benefits of Class Diagram 4.Essential elements of A UML class diagram 5.Aggregation vs. Composition 6.Abstract Classes 7.Example of UML Class Diagram 8.Class Diagram in Software Development Lifecycle 9.Best practices of Designing of the Class Diagram Chapter 6: What is UML Object Diagram? Tutorial with Example 1.What is a Class Diagram? 2.What is an Object Diagram? 3.How to draw an object diagram? 4.Purpose of an object diagram: 5.Applications of Object Diagrams: 6.Class vs. Object Diagrams Chapter 7: UML Use Case Diagram: Tutorial with EXAMPLE 1.What is the Use Case Diagram? 2.Why Use-Case diagram? 3.Use-case diagram notations 4.How to draw a use-case diagram? 5.Tips for drawing a use-case diagram 6.An example of a use-case diagram 7.When to use a use-case diagram? Chapter 8: State Machine Diagram: UML Tutorial with EXAMPLE 1.What is a State Machine Diagram? 2.Why State Machine Diagram? 3.Notation and Symbol for State Machine 4.Types of State 5.How to draw a Statechart diagram? 6.When to use State Diagrams? 7.Example of State Machine 8.State machine vs. Flowchart Chapter 9: UML Activity Diagram: What is, Components, Symbol, EXAMPLE 1.What is an Activity Diagram? 2.Components of Activity Diagram 3.Why use Activity Diagrams? 4.Activity Diagram Notations 5.How to draw an activity diagram? 6.Example of Activity Diagram 7.When Use Activity Diagram Chapter 10: Interaction, Collaboration, Sequence Diagrams with EXAMPLES 1.What is Interaction diagram? 2.Purpose of an Interaction Diagram 3.Important terminology 4.Types of Interaction diagram and Notations 5.Sequence Diagram 6.What is the Collaboration diagram? 7.Timing diagram 8.How to draw a Interaction diagram? 9.Use of an interaction diagram Chapter 11: Component Diagram: UML Tutorial with EXAMPLE 1.What is Component Diagram? 2.Component diagram Notations 3.What is a Component? 4.Why use Component Diagram? 5.When to use Component Diagram? 6.How to draw a component diagram 7.Example of a component diagram Chapter 12: Deployment Diagram: UML Tutorial with EXAMPLE 1.What is Deployment Diagram? 2.Purpose of a deployment diagram 3.Deployment Diagram Symbol and notations 4.What is an artifact? 5.What is a node? 6.How to draw a deployment diagram? 7.Example of a Deployment diagram 8.When to use a deployment diagram? Click the BUY button now and download the book now to start learning UML. Learn it fast and learn it well. Pick up your copy today by clicking the BUY NOW button at the top of this page!




Sams Teach Yourself UML in 24 Hours


Book Description

Learn UML, the Unified Modeling Language, to create diagrams describing the various aspects and uses of your application before you start coding, to ensure that you have everything covered. Millions of programmers in all languages have found UML to be an invaluable asset to their craft. More than 50,000 previous readers have learned UML with Sams Teach Yourself UML in 24 Hours. Expert author Joe Schmuller takes you through 24 step-by-step lessons designed to ensure your understanding of UML diagrams and syntax. This updated edition includes the new features of UML 2.0 designed to make UML an even better modeling tool for modern object-oriented and component-based programming. The CD-ROM includes an electronic version of the book, and Poseidon for UML, Community Edition 2.2, a popular UML modeling tool you can use with the lessons in this book to create UML diagrams immediately.







Object-oriented Systems Analysis and Design Using UML


Book Description

Provides a practical framework for development that uses the major techniques from UML 2.2. This book follows an iterative and incremental approach based on the industry-standard Unified Process, placing systems analysis and design in the context of the whole systems lifestyle.




UML Diagramming


Book Description

The Unified Modeling Language, better known as UML, has become the de facto standard modeling language for analyzing and designing software applications and systems. Software analysis and design is just as much an art as it is a science. UML Diagramming: A Catalog of Cases shows the art and the science behind successful software analysis and design with more than 35 case studies of applications of a variety of industries, including: Transportation Healthcare Supply chain management Education Agriculture Manufacturing The book explains UML diagramming through case studies to help systems and software developers specify, visualize, construct, and document the artifacts of software systems. The cases demonstrate how UML embodies software engineering best practices for modeling large and complex systems. They show how UML is an intuitive diagramming language that can be easily understood by end-users and business professionals. These cases studies also demonstrate how UML is a powerful language for communicating software designs to help developers and end users validate application scope, requirements, and features. Case studies highlighted in the book included: WEBMED healthcare service system services Inventory management system Business process outsourcing (BPO) management system Weather monitoring system Product recommendation system Textile management system Smart traffic management system Online pharmacy management system Placement automation system Farm management system Art gallery management system Website development This catalog of UML case studies is an invaluable reference for students studying software engineering, programmers starting out their careers, and seasoned systems developers needing a reference guide.