WILEY

KNOWLEDGE FOR GENERATIONS

WILEY - KNOWLEDGE FOR GENERATIONS

United States Change Location

cart.gif CART |  MY ACCOUNT |  CONTACT US |  HELP    
Wiley.com
Fundamental Modeling Concepts: Effective Communication of IT Systems (047002710X) cover image
Fundamental Modeling Concepts: Effective Communication of IT Systems
ISBN: 978-0-470-02710-3
Paperback
350 pages
April 2006
US $90.00 Add to Cart

This price is valid for United States. Change location to view local pricing and availability.

This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 2-3 days delivery time. The book is not returnable.

  • Description
  • Table of Contents
  • Author Information
Foreword.

Preface.

1 Introduction.

1.1 The need for communication.

1.2 The FMC Idea.

1.3 Outline of this book.

2 Compositional Structures.

2.1 An example: The travel agency.

2.2 Modeling the structure of a system.

2.3 Agents accessing storages.

2.4 Agents communicate via channels.

2.5 Summary.

2.6 Exercises.

3 Dynamic Structures.

3.1 Petrinets: Basic principles.

3.2 Conflicts and conditions.

3.3 Basic patterns.

3.4 Responsibilities and scope boundaries.

3.5 Summary.

3.6 Exercises.

4 Value Structures and Mind Maps.

4.1 Entity sets and relationships.

4.2 Cardinalities.

4.3 Predicates and roles.

4.4 Partitions.

4.5 Reification.

4.6 Summary.

4.7 Exercises.

5 FMC Basics: Summary.

6 Reinforcing the Concepts.

6.1 The meta model: A mind map to FMC.

6.2 Operational versus control state.

6.3 Block diagrams: Advanced concepts.

6.4 Petrinets: Advanced concepts.

6.5 Non-hierarchical transformations and semantic layers.

6.6 Exercises.

7 Towards Implementation Structures.

7.1 System structure versus software structure.

7.2 From Processor to processes.

7.3 Distribution, concurrency and synchronization.

7.4 From FMC to objects and classes.

7.5 Conceptual patterns versus software patterns.

8 Applying FMC in Your Daily Work.

8.1 Becoming comfortable with FMC.

8.2 Describing existing systems with FMC.

8.3 Using FMC in construction.

8.4 Using FMCdiagrams to support communication.

8.5 Guidelines for didactical modeling.

8.6 Cost and benefit of modeling.

9 Modeling and Visualization Guidelines.

9.1 Introduction.

9.2 Increasingt he reader’s perception.

9.3 Increasing comprehension.

9.4 Secondary notation, patterns and pitfalls.

10 Relationship with Other Modeling Approaches.

10.1 Comparing FMC with Structured Analysis.

10.2 FMC and the Unified Modeling Language.

11 A System of Server Patterns 247

11.1 Applicationdomain.

11.2 A pattern language for request processing servers.

11.3 Example applications.

11.4 Conclusion and further research.

Epilogue.

A Solutions.

B Reference Sheets.

C Glossary.

References.

Index.

Share This    Printer-ready version