Visual Paradigm for UML

Visual Paradigm for UML
Developer(s) Visual Paradigm International [1]
Stable release 12.2 build 20151201 / December 1, 2015 [2]
Operating system Cross-platform
Type UML Tool
License Proprietary with Free Community Edition
Website www.visual-paradigm.com

Visual Paradigm for UML (VP-UML) is a UML CASE Tool supporting UML 2, SysML and Business Process Modeling Notation (BPMN) from the Object Management Group (OMG). In addition to modeling support, it provides report generation and code engineering capabilities including code generation. It can reverse engineer diagrams from code, and provide round-trip engineering for various programming languages.

Product Editions

Higher-priced editions provide more features.[3]

The following editions were available in November 2010:

A free edition for non-commercial use. Supports all 13 UML diagram types. For projects with one diagram only, exported diagram contains small watermark, if it has more diagrams, a full watermark is placed instead.
For non-commercial use only.
Supports BPMN 2.0 for modeling of business processes.

UML Modeling

VP-UML supports 13 types of diagrams:

Requirements Management

VP supports requirements management including user stories, use cases, SysML requirement diagrams and textual analysis.

A SysML requirement diagram specifies the capability or condition that must be delivered in the target system. Capability refers to the functions that the system must support. Condition means that the system should be able to run or produce the result given a specific constraint. VP-UML provides a SysML requirement diagram for specifying and analyzing requirements.

Business Process Modeling

Supports BPMN 2.0 for modeling of business processes.

Data Modeling

VP-UML supports both Entity Relationship Diagrams (ERD) and Object Relational Mapping Diagrams (ORMD). ERD is used to model the relational database. ORMD is one of the tools to show the mapping between class from object-oriented world and entity in relational database world.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, December 17, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.