Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Enterprise & Application Frameworks

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Enterprise & Application Frameworks"— Presentation transcript:

1 Enterprise & Application Frameworks
Dr. M.E. Fayad, Professor Computer Engineering Department – RM# College of Engineering San José State University One Washington Square San José, CA URL: Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE

2 Object-Oriented Concepts-3
Lesson 5: Object-Oriented Concepts-3 2 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

3 3 Lesson Objectives Discuss UML Associations Discuss UML – aggregation
Understand UML- inheritance Explore use case concepts Understand How to identify UML Artifacts 3 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

4 Associations An association shows a two-way relationship between objects (instances) of two or more classes and requiring special implementation to ensure integrity. A particular instance of an association is often called a link. Associations between classes are required if the objects need to communicate. Associations are often named, and have role-names for each side of the link. 4 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

5 5 More on Associations Association Name Car Person
Vehicle Registration model year # of doors name age address registeredCar owner Roles Names 5 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

6 6 More on Associations Simple example:
An association has a name and a numerical specification (multiplicity indication) of how many objects on one side of the association are connected with how many objects on the other side. Associations are called use relationships – even if this may seem somewhat cheeky in the example below displays 0..* Window GeomFigure employs 0..* Company Person 6 Employer Employee Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

7 More on Associations Associations are directed (one way), bidirectional, and undirected. UML makes no distinction between bidirectional and undirected associations. Multiplicity Stereotype RelationName {Constraints} * Class1 Class2 7 role1 Role2: interface Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

8 More on Associations Recursive association: A class has a relation with itself. It is also possible to model associations that are valid only temporarily “stereotype or temporary” Constraints may be used to restrict the relation under specific aspects. A role name describes how the object is seen by the opposite object in the association. An association can be described in more detail by means of constraints, tagged values, and stereotypes. Stereotypes are noted before or above the relation name, constraints, and tagged values after or below the name. 8 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

9 More on Associations Directed association is a one-way association, in which one side knows the other, but not vice versa. Multiplicity Specification: 1 exactly one 0, 1 zero or one 0..4 between zero and four 3, 7 either three or seven 9 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

10 10 More on Associations More multiplicity specifications:
0..* greater than or equal to zero (default) * ditto 1..* greater than or equal to one 0..3, 7, 9..* between zero and three, or exactly seven, or greater than or equal to nine. 10 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

11 More on Associations Recursive associations are associations in which one class is involved. has Patient Employee name staffNo roomNo office clerk relative * * 1 manager Person leads 11 reports to Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

12 N-ary Association An n-ary association is like a common (binary) association, except that more than two association roles involved in it. N-ary association Class1 Class2 Ternary association 12 Class3 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

13 More on n-ary Association
Reservation Seat Train 1..* 1 carriageNo seatNo date trainNo 1..* Passenger name title Ternary association 13 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

14 14 More on Associations N-ary Associations
Recursive Associations N-ary Associations Attributed Associations (Association Class) Association Constraints Qualified Associations Derived Associations Directed Associations Ordered Associations Realization/Refinements Dependency 14 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

15 15 More on Associations Associations are usually bidirectional
Allows each object involved in the relationship to refer to the object to which it is related. Bidirectional association means at the relationship has an inverse. Associations do not have to be bidirectional. 15 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

16 16 Association Type One-to-One One-to-Many (One-to-Zero-or-More)
Marriage Woman Association Type One-to-One One-to-Many (One-to-Zero-or-More) Many-to-Many Zero or One husband wife Screen Windows Window Nets Authorization User Car Trailer 16 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

17 17 Association Type Specified the # of instances on the “many” side
Specify the possible # of instances using “or” Ternary relationship Square Sides Line Secure Room Occupants Person TraditionalFamily Male Female father mother children 17 Child Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

18 18 Association Class Connection Connection
Server Connection Client Connection baudRate protocol wireType disconnect rerouteLink • These attributes don’t belong in either the Client or Server class. • They are attributes of the connection itself. 18 • The association class can have behaviors as well as attributes. Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

19 Aggregation & Composite
Aggregation is a special form of association. Aggregation is used when the relationship is “part/whole” or “contains/is-part-of” Aggregation is transitive and operations on “whole” often cascade down to “parts”. 19 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

20 Aggregation & Composite
Computer Server Aggregation “whole” “part” 52 * Client CPU Disk Drive Keyboard Mouse 20 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

21 Aggregation & Composite
Special diamond symbol used on “whole” side to indicate aggregation. Aggregation is an anti-symmetric that is, if A is part of B, then B is not part of A. DO NOT confuse aggregation with generalization An essential property of aggregates is that the whole acts as a proxy for its parts. A composition is a strict form of aggregation, in which the parts are existence-dependent on the entirely 21 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

22 Aggregation & Composite
Part Entirely Composition Existence- DependentPart 22 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

23 Aggregation Problem Mr. Clinton’s hand is part-of Mr. Clinton & Mr. Clinton is part-of U.S.A. Therefore: Mr. Clinton’s hand is part-of U.S.A. 23 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

24 24 Cash Register Example Keypad * Number Keys Total Key Subtotal Key
display display display drawer Display Drawer 24 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

25 Attributes Attributes are simply the information associated with the object. The data type used to hold the attributes is often a fundamental type, such as int or char. Sometimes the attribute can be a non-fundamental type, such as String type and Address type. Avoid using attributes which might be better implemented as an association to a new class. 25 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

26 26 More on Attributes * For example: x Using Association
Using Attributes Using Association TV TV Manufacturer String model String serialNum String manName String model String serialNum product manu- facturer String name Address address * Why? Using an association to a Manufacturer class, the name and address of each manufacturer will be stored in one place rather than in each of the TV objects made by that manufacturer. 26 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

27 27 More on Attributes Employee Employee Split into two classes
If attributes only make sense in some instances of a given class but not in others. It will make sense to split the single class into two classes or more. Employee String name float salary Employee Split into two classes String name float salary long clearanceNum inheritance ClearedEmployee 27 long clearanceNum openVault() • Not all employees have clearances Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

28 Inheritance When a relationship exists between classes such that lower-level classes (called subclasses) share certain attributes and behaviors which can be defined once in a higher-level class (called superclasses). Subclasses inherit properties (attributes and behaviors) of its superclass and then adds its own unique properties and modifies any inherited properties. This is called Generalization or Inheritance. 28 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

29 29 More on Inheritance Window paintWindow size bitmaps icon textWindow
contents 29 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

30 Aggregation vs. Inheritance
Aggregation Inheritance Instances of distinct classes Instances of a single class “a-part-of” (APO) “a-kind-of” or “is-a” (AKO) Contains superclass-of Aggregate + parts Superclass + subclass “and” relationship “or” relationship Propagated only if specified Inheritance 30 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad

31 Discussion Questions What are the other terms for attributes & operations? Define an object and a class in UML What is an association? Give examples Associations are usually bidirectional. Please describe. Describe the basic difference between aggregation and inheritance. What do they have in common? What do you think “multiple inheritance” means? Which type of association is more likely to yield savings in the amount of code required for implementation? why? Define the process of identifying objects, classes, inheritance, associations & aggregation, attributes, and behaviors Define Polymorphism with examples What do we mean by saying “Model/View/Controller”? 31 Fall 2002 SJSU -- CmpE M.E. Fayad


Download ppt "Enterprise & Application Frameworks"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google