2.5 Sections
A UML section is a
grouping of
paragraphs about a common subject. For instance, the English language
groups paragraphs into sections, such as the one you are currently
reading. UML sections
are architectural
views. An architectural view is a category of
diagrams addressing a specific set of concerns. All the different
architectural views determine the different ways in which we can
understand a system. For example, all the figures shown so far in
this chapter may be organized into different views, including those
for addressing functional, structural, behavioral, and other pieces
of the project management system. The elements that make up a view
are known as view elements. For example,
all the elements in the figures are view
elements when we classify the diagram on which they appear into a
specific view.
Because the UML is a language and not a methodology, it does not
prescribe any explicit architectural views, but the UML diagrams may
be generally organized around the following commonly used
architectural views:
- The use-case or user architectural view
-
Focuses on the
functionality of a system, using use-case
diagrams to communicate what functionality the system provides to its
users.
- The structural or static architectural view
-
Focuses on the
structure of a system, using class and
object diagrams to communicate what elements and relationships make
up the system.
- The behavioral or dynamic architectural view
-
Focuses on the
behavior of a system, using sequence,
collaboration, state, and activity diagrams to communicate the
interactions and collaborations of the elements that make up the
system.
- The component or implementation architectural view
-
Focuses on the
implementation
of a system, using component diagrams to communicate how the system
is implemented.
- The deployment or environment model architectural view
-
Focuses on the
implementation environment, using
deployment diagrams to communicate how the implemented system resides
in its environment.
Even though each type of diagram is organized around a single
architectural view, any diagram type can be used in any architectural
view. For example, an interaction diagram can be used in a use-case
view to communicate how users interact with a system. Furthermore,
the UML allows us to define our own architectural views, as
necessary. For example, we can define a data store architectural
view, and we can define a new type of diagram, perhaps called a
database schema diagram, to communicate the tables in a database and
their relationships. We could then use other types of diagrams to
communicate the triggers and stored procedures in a database.
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