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BS ISO/IEC 19501:2005

Current

Current

The latest, up-to-date edition.

Information technology. Open distributed processing. Unified modeling language (UML). Version 1.4.2

Available format(s)

Hardcopy , PDF

Language(s)

English

Published date

09-30-2005

1 Scope
2 Normative references
  2.1 Identical Recommendations/International Standards
3 General Information
  3.1 Description
  3.2 Outside the Scope of the UML
  3.3 Primary Artifacts of the UML
  3.4 Motivation to Define the UML
  3.5 Goals of the UML
  3.6 UML - Past, Present, and Future
4 UML Semantics
Part 1 - Background
  4.1 Introduction
  4.2 Language Architecture
  4.3 Language Formalism
Part 2 - Foundation
  4.4 Foundation Package
  4.5 Core
  4.6 Extension Mechanisms
  4.7 Data Types
Part 3 - Behavioral Elements
   4.8 Behavioral Elements Package
   4.9 Common Behavior
   4.10 Collaborations
   4.11 Use Cases
   4.12 State Machines
   4.13 Activity Graphs
Part 4 - General Mechanisms
   4.14 Model Management
5 UML Notation Guide
Part 1 - Background
   5.1 Introduction
Part 2 - Diagram Elements
   5.2 Graphs and Their Contents
   5.3 Drawing Paths
   5.4 Invisible Hyperlinks and the Role of Tools
   5.5 Background Information
   5.6 String
   5.7 Name
   5.8 Label
   5.9 Keywords
   5.10 Expression
   5.11 Note
   5.12 Type-Instance Correspondence
Part 3 - Model Management
   5.13 Package
   5.14 Subsystem
   5.15 Model
Part 4 - General Extension Mechanisms
   5.16 Constraint and Comment
   5.17 Element Properties
   5.18 Stereotypes
Part 5 - Static Structure Diagrams
   5.19 Class Diagram
   5.20 Object Diagram
   5.21 Classifier
   5.22 Class
   5.23 Name Compartment
   5.24 List Compartment
   5.25 Attribute
   5.26 Operation
   5.27 Nested Class Declarations
   5.28 Type and Implementation Class
   5.29 Interfaces
   5.30 Parameterized Class (Template
   5.31 Bound Element
   5.32 Utility
   5.33 Metaclass
   5.34 Enumeration
   5.35 Stereotype Declaration
   5.36 Powertype
   5.37 Class Pathnames
   5.38 Accessing or Importing a Package
   5.39 Object
   5.40 Composite Object
   5.41 Association
   5.42 Binary Association
   5.43 Association End
   5.44 Multiplicity
   5.45 Qualifier
   5.46 Association Class
   5.47 N-ary Association
   5.48 Composition
   5.49 Link
   5.50 Generalization
   5.51 Dependency
   5.52 Derived Element
   5.53 InstanceOf
Part 6 - Use Case Diagrams
   5.54 Use Case Diagram
   5.55 Use Case
   5.56 Actor
   5.57 Use Case Relationships
   5.58 Actor Relationships
Part 7 - Interaction Diagrams
   5.59 Collaboration
   5.60 Sequence Diagram
   5.61 Object Lifeline
   5.62 Activation
   5.63 Message and Stimulus
   5.64 Transition Times
Part 8 - Collaboration Diagrams
   5.65 Collaboration Diagram
   5.66 Pattern Structure
   5.67 Collaboration Contents
   5.68 Interactions
   5.69 Collaboration Roles
   5.70 Multiobject
   5.71 Active object
   5.72 Message and Stimulus
   5.73 Creation/Destruction Markers
Part 9 - Statechart Diagrams
   5.74 Statechart Diagram
   5.75 State
   5.76 Composite States
   5.77 Events
   5.78 Simple Transitions
   5.79 Transitions to and from Concurrent States
   5.80 Transitions to and from Composite States
   5.81 Factored Transition Paths
   5.82 Submachine States
   5.83 Synch States
Part 10 - Activity Diagrams
   5.84 Activity Diagram
   5.85 Action State
   5.86 Subactivity state
   5.87 Decisions
   5.88 Call States
   5.89 Swimlanes
   5.90 Action-Object Flow Relationships
   5.91 Control Icons
   5.92 Synch States
   5.93 Dynamic Invocation
   5.94 Conditional Forks
Part 11 - Implementation Diagrams
   5.95 Component Diagram
   5.96 Deployment Diagram
   5.97 Node
   5.98 Component
6 UML Example Profiles
Example 1 - UML Profile for Software Development Processes
   6.1 Introduction
   6.2 Summary of Profile
   6.3 Stereotypes and Notation
   6.4 Well-Formedness Rules
Example 2 - UML Profile for Business Modeling
   6.5 Introduction
   6.6 Summary of Profile
   6.7 Stereotypes and Notation
   6.8 Well-Formedness Rules
7 UML Model Interchange
   7.1 Overview
   7.2 Model Interchange Using XMI
   7.3 Model Interchange Using CORBA IDL
8 Object Constraint Language Specification
   8.1 Overview
   8.2 Introduction
   8.3 Relation to the UML Metamodel
   8.4 Basic Values and Types
   8.5 Objects and Properties
   8.6 Collection Operations
   8.7 The Standard OCL Package
   8.8 Predefined OCL Types
   8.9 Grammar
A UML Standard Elements
B Legal Information
Glossary
Index

Specifies the Unified Modeling Language (UML) with the objective of providing system architects working on object analysis and design with one consistent language for specifying, visualizing, constructing, and documenting the artifacts of software systems, as well as for business modeling.

This standard specifies the Unified Modeling Language (UML) with the objective of providing system architects working on object analysis and design with one consistent language for specifying, visualizing, constructing, and documenting the artifacts of software systems, as well as for business modeling. This standard represents the convergence of best practices in the object-technology industry. UML is the proper successor to the object modeling languages of three previously leading object-oriented methods (Booch, OMT, and OOSE). The UML is the union of these modeling languages and more, since it includes additional expressiveness to handle modeling problems that these methods did not fully address. One of the primary goals of UML is to advance the state of the industry by enabling object visual modeling tool interoperability. However, in order to enable meaningful exchange of model information between tools, agreement on semantics and notation is required. UML meets the following requirements: Formal definition of a common object analysis and design (OA&D) metamodel to represent the semantics of OA&D models, which include static models, behavioral models, usage models, and architectural models. IDL specifications for mechanisms for model interchange between OA&D tools. This document includes a set of IDL interfaces that support dynamic construction and traversal of a user model. A human-readable notation for representing OA&D models. This document defines the UML notation, an elegant graphic syntax for consistently expressing the UML\'s rich semantics. Notation is an essential part of OA&D modeling and the UML.

Committee
IST/15
DevelopmentNote
Supersedes 00/647777 DC. (10/2005)
DocumentType
Standard
Pages
458
PublisherName
British Standards Institution
Status
Current
Supersedes

Standards Relationship
ISO/IEC 19501:2005 Identical

ISO/IEC 15476-4:2005 Information technology CDIF semantic metamodel Part 4: Data models
ISO/IEC 15475-1:2002 Information technology CDIF transfer format Part 1: General rules for syntaxes and encodings
ISO/IEC 15476-6:2006 Information technology CDIF semantic metamodel Part 6: State/event models
ISO/IEC 15474-2:2002 Information technology CDIF framework Part 2: Modelling and extensibility
ISO/IEC 15476-2:2002 Information technology CDIF semantic metamodel Part 2: Common
ISO/IEC 15476-3:2006 Information technology CDIF semantic metamodel Part 3: Data definitions
ISO/IEC 15474-1:2002 Information technology CDIF framework Part 1: Overview
ISO/IEC 15476-1:2002 Information technology CDIF semantic metamodel Part 1: Foundation
ISO/IEC 15475-2:2002 Information technology CDIF transfer format Part 2: Syntax SYNTAX.1
ISO/IEC 15475-3:2002 Information technology CDIF transfer format Part 3: Encoding ENCODING.1

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