NPCR–AERRO Diagram Conventions
The Advancing E-cancer Reporting and Registry Operations (AERRO) model diagrams are based on the Unified Modeling Language (UML). This document outlines additional conventions used specifically for AERRO.
General Conventions
- Diagrams flow from top to bottom.
- Diagrams flow from left to right.
- The version number changes only when major changes are implemented. For minor changes, there is no version change.
- Notes are represented by rectangles with the top right corner folded down.
- The work being discussed is shaded purple.
- General comments or questions are shown in white or purple colors.
Decision Nodes in Activity Diagrams (Workflow and Data Flow Diagrams)
- Text questions are to the left of the decision node.
- All activity diagrams (in general) have one start point and one end point.
Use Case Diagrams
- The first level is represented as a package. A package is a container in the shape of a yellow folder which can contain different model elements such as use cases and other packages.
- Second-level use cases are represented by light blue ovals.
- Each use case is assigned to the first or second level according to its hierarchy.
Activity Diagrams (Workflow and Data Flow Diagrams)
- Decisions are represented by light yellow diamonds.
- Start and end nodes are represented by black circles with a red outline.
- State transition specifications are presented as a guard condition for transition from one state to another.
- Business rules and software requirements are shown in the right swimlane (column) in light blue.
- Horizontal and vertical solid black lines are synchronization bars.
Technicalities and Concepts to Understand the Diagrams
- Domain Diagram: The classes connecting to "Internal and External Data Source" classes are actual data sources, not data coming from those classes.
- Use Case Diagram: The use cases are presented in a hierarchical way. The highest or first-level use case consists of the second-level use case(s) and so on.
- Workflow Diagram: The details presented in this diagram are limited. It is a simple representation of the normal course of events.
- Data Flow Diagram: This is a detailed diagram with all conditions covered for a use case or process. It presents exceptions, alternate courses of events, and business rules for the normal course of events in the process.
- All Diagrams: When reading a diagram, pay attention to the direction of arrows.
- Page last reviewed: November 23, 2015
- Page last updated: November 23, 2015
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