Automated Documentation
for Rational Rose Using SoDA
SoDA(R) automates the production of software documents and
substantially
reduces the time and effort required to create documentation. SoDA
makes your
software documentation more useful by improving its quality,
consistency, and
accessibility in all phases of the software-development
lifecycle.
With SoDA, you can automatically create documents from your
Rational Rose(R)
models. You can traverse the semantic relationships in the Rational
Rose model,
extracting graphical and textual information to create customizable
documents.
Rational Rose provides a powerful capability to create, verify, and
visualize your
object-oriented software analysis and design. Using SoDA, you can
take this
capability one step further, quickly enhancing and disseminating
your information
by automatically generating online or hard-copy documentation.
With SoDA, you can also document your C++ source code and extract
information directly from the code. Combined with the reverse-engineering
capability of Rational Rose/C++, SoDA is the ideal solution for
documenting
legacy code.
The SoDA/Rational Rose solution for documentation
First, you create and manipulate analysis and design information
using Rational
Rose, or you reverse engineer it from C++ code using Rational
Rose/C++.
Templates
To document this information, you start with a SoDA template.
Templates define
the structure and format of your final documents and the mapping
between
document sections and elements of your Rational Rose model. You
can use one
of SoDA's standard templates without modification, modify an
existing template,
or create a new template with SoDA's easy-to-use, intuitive
graphical user
interface on top of a WYSIWYG editor.
The template editor understands the semantics of the Rational Rose
data model,
and therefore, you can create document structures that reflect the
structure of the
Rational Rose model. For example, as illustrated in the figure below,
you can
specify that Section 2 will contain the top-level class diagram in
Rational Rose
and that there will be a Section 3.X for every class that appears on
the top-level
diagram.
Document generation
Once you have created a template, you can use it again on any of your
Rational
Rose models simply by specifying the model you want to document
and telling
SoDA to generate.
Depending on how you created the template, SoDA will generate a
complete
document entirely from the Rational Rose model or a document with
placeholders for supplemental information. You can enhance the
document by
adding text, tables, figures, and so on directly into the document
using SoDA's
WYSIWYG editor.
Document merging
When your Rational Rose model changes, SoDA can regenerate your
document
without losing the supplemental information that you entered
manually. During
this unique process, called Intelligent Document Merging(TM), SoDA
compares
your existing document with the Rational Rose model, updates
outdated
sections, removes irrelevant sections, and inserts new sections--all without
overwriting the supplemental information you previously entered.
Requirements traceability
You can assign requirements to classes and scenario diagrams. Then,
you can
automatically generate requirements traceability tables that show
which classes
and scenarios satisfy a particular requirement and vice versa. SoDA
gives you
control over your requirements by helping you allocate, review, and
analyze
them.
SoDA's unique value
The analysis and design information you create with Rational Rose is
an
important asset. With SoDA, you can leverage that asset and
automatically
create software documentation. If you produce or plan to produce
documentation
manually, SoDA will save you significant time and money. If you
want to produce
software documentation but have not been able to spare the
resources, SoDA's
automated capabilities will make it possible.
Platform availability
SoDA is currently available for Sun workstations and will soon be
available on all
major UNIX platforms. SoDA can document any Rational Rose model,
regardless
of the platform on which it was created.
D-134; last updated 10/2/95