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Elements of the View {#elements-of-the-view .title}
Activities that have to be carried out for the exchange of messages between IT systems can be illustrated well with sequence diagrams and activity diagrams (see Figure 5.4).
- The activity diagram describes the flows of actions. The diagram depicts the dependencies between individual actions and the flow of business objects.
- The sequence diagram depicts the chronological order of the exchange of messages between the IT systems.
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- Hide Method
- Replace Constructor with Factory Method
- Replace Error Code with Exception
- Replace Exception with Test
- Dealing with Generalisation
- UML
- Introduction
- Basic Principles and Background
- Modeling Business Systems
- Business Processes and Business Systems
- One Model---Two Views
- External View
- The Elements of a View
- Use Case Diagrams
- Constructing Use Case Diagrams
- Activity Diagrams
- Constructing Activity Diagrams
- Sequence Diagrams
- Constructing Sequence Diagrams
- High-Level Sequence Diagrams
- Sequence Diagrams for Scenarios of Business Use Cases
- Internal View
- Package Diagram
- Constructing Package Diagrams
- Class Diagram
- Constructing Class Diagrams
- Activity Diagram
- Modeling IT Systems
- External View
- The User View or “I don’t care how it works, as long as it works.”
- The Elements of a View
- Use Case Diagram
- Query Events and Mutation Events
- Use Case Sequence Diagram
- Constructing the External View
- Structural View
- Objects and Classes
- Generalization, Specialization, and Inheritance
- Static and Dynamic Business Rules
- Elements of the View
- Class Diagram
- Constructing Class Diagrams
- The Behavioral View
- The Life of an Object
- The Elements of the View
- Statechart Diagram
- Constructing Statechart Diagrams
- Interaction View
- Seeing What Happens Inside the IT System
- Elements of the View
- Communication Diagram
- Sequence Diagram
- Constructing Communication Diagrams
- Constructing Sequence Diagrams
- Modeling for System
Integration
- Terminology of System Integration
- Messages in UML
- One Model---Two Views
- Process View
- The Business System Model as Foundation
- Elements of the View
- Activity Diagrams
- Sequence Diagram
- Constructing Diagrams in the Process View
- The Static View
- Elements of the View
- Class Diagram
- Constructing Class Diagrams
- Transforming Data from the IT System to the Message “passenger list”
- Transformation of UML Messages into Various Standard Formats
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{.home} / UML{.type} / Modeling for System Integration{.type}
Elements of the View {#elements-of-the-view-1 .title}
Activities that have to be carried out for the exchange of messages between IT systems can be illustrated well with sequence diagrams and activity diagrams (see Figure 5.4).
- The activity diagram describes the flows of actions. The diagram depicts the dependencies between individual actions and the flow of business objects.
- The sequence diagram depicts the chronological order of the exchange of messages between the IT systems.
Read next
Activity Diagrams []{.fa .fa-arrow-right}{.btn .btn-primary rel=“next”}
Return
[]{.fa .fa-arrow-left} The Business System Model as Foundation{.btn .btn-default rel=“prev”}
Computer Science Distilled{.btn .btn-landing-ref .btn-hg .btn-block .btn-secondary style=“font-size: 16px; position: relative”}
Do you remember anything at all from your computer science class? Quicksort, Graph traversal, Big’O and other stuff? Revise your memories with our new book on Computer Science.
Psst! Did I mention that we’re offering sexy discounts right now?
{width=“250” height=“312” srcset=“/images/content-public/logos/logo-2x.png?id=fee3b4b0a14ba60dc0fe368695d78be9 2x”}{.menu-brand}
- Premium Stuff
- Design Patterns
- AntiPatterns
- Refactoring
- Code Smells
- Refactoring techniques
- Composing Methods
- Moving Features between Objects
- Organizing Data
- Self Encapsulate Field
- Replace Data Value with Object
- Change Value to Reference
- Change Reference to Value
- Replace Array with Object
- Duplicate Observed Data
- Change Unidirectional Association to Bidirectional
- Change Bidirectional Association to Unidirectional
- Replace Magic Number with Symbolic Constant
- Encapsulate Field
- Encapsulate Collection
- Replace Type Code with Class
- Replace Type Code with Subclasses
- Strategy
- Replace Subclass with Fields
- Simplifying Conditional Expressions
- Simplifying Method
Calls
- Rename Method
- Add Parameter
- Remove Parameter
- Separate Query from Modifier
- Parameterize Method
- Replace Parameter with Explicit Methods
- Preserve Whole Object
- Replace Parameter with Method Call
- Introduce Parameter Object
- Remove Setting Method
- Hide Method
- Replace Constructor with Factory Method
- Replace Error Code with Exception
- Replace Exception with Test
- Dealing with Generalisation
- UML
- Introduction
- Basic Principles and Background
- Modeling Business Systems
- Business Processes and Business Systems
- One Model---Two Views
- External View
- The Elements of a View
- Use Case Diagrams
- Constructing Use Case Diagrams
- Activity Diagrams
- Constructing Activity Diagrams
- Sequence Diagrams
- Constructing Sequence Diagrams
- High-Level Sequence Diagrams
- Sequence Diagrams for Scenarios of Business Use Cases
- Internal View
- Package Diagram
- Constructing Package Diagrams
- Class Diagram
- Constructing Class Diagrams
- Activity Diagram
- Modeling IT Systems
- External View
- The User View or “I don’t care how it works, as long as it works.”
- The Elements of a View
- Use Case Diagram
- Query Events and Mutation Events
- Use Case Sequence Diagram
- Constructing the External View
- Structural View
- Objects and Classes
- Generalization, Specialization, and Inheritance
- Static and Dynamic Business Rules
- Elements of the View
- Class Diagram
- Constructing Class Diagrams
- The Behavioral View
- The Life of an Object
- The Elements of the View
- Statechart Diagram
- Constructing Statechart Diagrams
- Interaction View
- Seeing What Happens Inside the IT System
- Elements of the View
- Communication Diagram
- Sequence Diagram
- Constructing Communication Diagrams
- Constructing Sequence Diagrams
- Modeling for System
Integration
- Terminology of System Integration
- Messages in UML
- One Model---Two Views
- Process View
- The Business System Model as Foundation
- Elements of the View
- Activity Diagrams
- Sequence Diagram
- Constructing Diagrams in the Process View
- The Static View
- Elements of the View
- Class Diagram
- Constructing Class Diagrams
- Transforming Data from the IT System to the Message “passenger list”
- Transformation of UML Messages into Various Standard Formats
Log in Contact us{.userecho-public rel=“nofollow”}
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