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Author Topic: regarding defintions use in the use case model  (Read 6319 times)

Legacy_Code

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regarding defintions use in the use case model
« on: June 16, 2005, 08:39:45 pm »
hi,

What's the difference between the "use case" and the "use case diagram"?
Does the "use case" shows the services or the facilities provided by the system to the user where "case diagram" contains the graphical view of the interactions happening between the user and the system? therefore "usecase" is not a graphic but "use case diagram" is a graphic?

PS: Please explian in a simplified language please (less jargon please)

sargasso

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Re: regarding defintions use in the use case model
« Reply #1 on: June 16, 2005, 11:19:27 pm »
A football on a use case diagram represents a use case.

A use case (rhymes with "juice case", not with "ewes case") is a single way that the system is used (ewes'd) by an initiating actor (aka primary actor, often a user (ewes'er)). It is modelled under eweML in a wide variety of ways.  In EA, it is one of those footballs with a whole truckload of descriptive gumph.  Some of the gumph is structured, some not so.

A use case diagram is a picture of a collection of one or more use case footballs and possibly some stick people, probably with some lines of various sorts between them.  The use case diagram is produced by the modeller to either solve a problem he/she is having conceptualising what the system is doing or is to do, or its to communicate some or all of what a system is doing/is to do between the modeller and some other sentient being.

Just like showing a cow a picture of a milkshake will not induce it to milk itself, showing a meaningless mess of visio clip art pictures of people, trucks and PC's to a programmer will not get you the despatch system you want.  So a bunch of guys got together and decided to create a visual modelling language, called eweML, where everything has a strict and precise meaning ...... to the cogniscenti anyway.

Because it has such precise meaning, I'm afraid that those big jargon words are necessary to explain the precise syntactical and semantic nuances. oh bugger, what precisely the footballs and stick people mean.

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KP

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Re: regarding defintions use in the use case model
« Reply #2 on: June 16, 2005, 11:38:02 pm »
Just to make it clear, when Bruce says "football" he means an Aussie Rules football or rugby ball, not a soccer ball. Other than that, he's pretty much nailed it.  ;D

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Paolo F Cantoni

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Re: regarding definition use in the use case model
« Reply #3 on: June 16, 2005, 11:47:01 pm »
Quote
Just to make it clear, when Bruce says "football" he means an Aussie Rules football or rugby ball, not a soccer ball. Other than that, he's pretty much nailed it.  ;D

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And he strictly and precisely does NOT mean an American Grid-Iron football. ;D

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« Last Edit: June 16, 2005, 11:47:17 pm by PaoloFCantoni »
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mikewhit

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Re: regarding defintions use in the use case model
« Reply #4 on: June 17, 2005, 12:33:20 am »
Aussie rules ... American ... they're all variations of rugby anyhow, aren't they ?
;-)


PS. I have an old (1930's) sports book which refers to "American rugby football" ...!
(I guess they didn't use tuning-forks as goalposts in those days.)
« Last Edit: June 17, 2005, 02:02:33 am by mikewhit »

Eve

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Re: regarding defintions use in the use case model
« Reply #5 on: June 21, 2005, 05:30:40 pm »
Quote
Just to make it clear, when Bruce says "football" he means an Aussie Rules football or rugby ball, not a soccer ball. Other than that, he's pretty much nailed it.  ;D

For more information, click here


I don't see any information clarifying about the different footballs there.  ;)

Simon

thomaskilian

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Re: regarding defintions use in the use case model
« Reply #6 on: June 22, 2005, 01:36:23 am »
Then you should update your documentation regarding to "balls" ;D