Input to Activities:
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Output from Activities:
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A boundary class represents an interface between the system and some entity
outside the system: a person or another system. Its role is to mediate the
exchange of information with the outside world, and to insulate the system from
changes in its surroundings.
Property Name |
Brief Description |
UML Representation |
Name |
The
name of the class. |
The
attribute "Name" on model element. |
Brief
Description |
A
brief description of the role and purpose of the class. |
Tagged
value, of type "short text". |
Responsibilities |
The
responsibilities defined by the class. |
A
(predefined) tagged value on the superclass "Type". |
Relationships |
The
relationships, such as generalizations, associations, and aggregations, in
which the class participates. |
Owned
by an enclosing package, via the aggregation "owns". |
Attributes |
The
attributes defined by the class. |
-
" - |
Special
Requirements |
A
textual description that collects all requirements (such as usability
requirements and non-functional requirements) on the boundary class that are
not considered in the analysis model, but that need to be taken care of
during prototyping, design and implementation. |
Tagged
value, of type "short text". |
Diagrams |
Any
diagrams local to the class, such as class diagrams depicting its attributes
and responsibilities. |
Owned
by an enclosing package, via the aggregation "owns". |
Boundary classes relevant to the usability of the system are identified and
described during the inception and/or elaboration phase before the user
interface is prototyped, designed, and implemented.
A user-interface designer or an object analyst is responsible for the
integrity of the boundary class, ensuring that:
- The class fulfills the requirements made on it from the use-case
realizations and use-case storyboards in which it participates.
- The class is as independent as possible of other classes.
- The properties of the class, including its responsibilities, uni-directional
relationships, and attributes, are justified and kept consistent with each
other.
- The role of the class in bi-directional relationships in which it is
involved is clear and intuitive.
- The visibilities of its members, primarily attributes, are correct. A
visibility can be "public," "private," and so on.
- The scope of its members, primarily operations and attributes, are
correct. A scope is "true" for a type/class scope, and
"false" for an object/instance scope.
- The Special Requirements are readable and suit their purpose.
- The diagrams describing the class are readable and consistent with the
other properties.
Copyright
⌐ 1987 - 2000 Rational Software Corporation
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