SDE for Eclipse 4.2 (Default branch)


 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Software Releases - RSS News SDE for Eclipse 4.2 (Default branch)
# 1  
Old 02-06-2008
SDE for Eclipse 4.2 (Default branch)

ImageSDE for Eclipse is a UML modeling environment tightly integrated with Eclipse IDE. It lets you draw all types of UML diagrams (use case diagrams, class diagrams, component diagrams, etc.) in Eclipse, reverse source code (Java, C++, XML, XML Schema, CORBA IDL, etc.) to UML models, and generate Java source from UML diagrams. It features the latest UML notation support, a Rational Rose importer, an XMI importer, Microsoft Visio integration, HTML/PDF documentation generators, and plug-in and template support. License: Free for non-commercial useChanges:
In this release, it has a number of new features which includes creating translated copies of model through the use of Nicknamer, support defining Requirement types and displaying in Tabular view, increased effects for publisher published Web contents, more robust annotation support via Callout and Freehand shape and allow copying, moving and reordering of class and entities members through drag and drop. In addition, Model Transitor is introduced for establishing transition and support traceability between models.Image

More...
Login or Register to Ask a Question

Previous Thread | Next Thread
Login or Register to Ask a Question
pyreverse(1)							   User's Manual						      pyreverse(1)

NAME
pyreverse - parse python sources files and extract diagrams from them. SYNOPSIS
pyreverse [options] <modules> DESCRIPTION
pyreverse is a python source analyzer. It parses a python packages and produces UML diagrams in different output formats. (dot, all formats available for dot, and vcg). With different options, you can have fine tuning on what and how modules, classes and attributes will be shown in the diagram. You can combine several modules in one project (except with -c ). If no -c and no --diadefs option specified, pyreverse will create - a diagram 'classes_<name>' for the classes in <modules> and ( if there is more than one module in <projects> ) - a diagram 'packages_<name>' for the package dependencies in <modules> With -c <class>, pyreverse creates a diagram for that <class> with filename <class>.<format>. You can do -c <class1> , -c <class2>. OPTIONS
-h, --help show help message and exit -p<name>, --project=<name> set project name to <name> if not using -c option. (default:'No Name') -i<file>, --ignore=<file> add <file> (may be a directory) to the black list (not parsed) -f<mode>, --filter-mode=<mode> filter attributes and functions according to <mode>. You can combine modes using '+' like 'SPECIAL+OTHER'. Correct modes are : - 'PUB_ONLY' : filter all non public attributes (default) - 'ALL' : no filter - 'SPECIAL' : filter Python special functions except constructor - 'OTHER' : filter protected and private attributes [currentt: PUB_ONLY] -d<file>, --diadefs=<file> create diagram according to the diagrams definitions in <file> -c <class>, --class=<class> create a class diagram with all classes related to <class> [current: none] the class must be in the file <modules>. By default, this will include all ancestors and associated classes of <class> and include module names (i.e. '-ASmy' ). -a <ancestor>, --show-ancestors=<ancestor> show <ancestor> generations of ancestor classes not in <projects> -A, --all-ancestors=[yn] show all ancestors off all classes in <projects> [current: none] -s <ass_level>, --show-associated=<associated> show <ass_level> associated classes. <ass_level>=1 will only take classes directly related to the classes in the project, while <ass_level>=2 will also take all classes related to those fetched by<depth>=1. -S, --all-associated=[yn] show recursively all associated off all associated classes [current: none] -b, --builtin include builtin objects in representation of classes [current: False] -m [yn], --module-names=[yn] include module name in representation of classes. This will include full module path in the class name. [current: none] -k, --only-classnames don't show attributes and methods in the class boxes; this disables -f values [current: False] -o <format>, --output=<format> create a *.<format> output file if format available. Available formats are all formats that dot can produce and vcg. [default: dot] EXAMPLES
Here are some examples for command line options : pyreverse <project> -a1 -s1 -m -a1 -s1 will include one level of ancestor and associated classes in the diagram of the <project> modules, while -m will show the full module path of each class. You can use the same way the -a, -s, -A, -S options. Note that on class diagrams (using -c ) -a and -s will rather reduce than enlarge your diagram. pyreverse mod/foo.py mod/fee.py -k This is interesting if the diagram for <project>=mod is too complicated: you can show only the class names (no attributes or meth- ods, option -k); or take only the modules you are interested in (here fee.py and foo.py). REQUIRES
Python SEE ALSO
dot(1), pylint(1) http://www.logilab.org/pyreverse AUTHORS
Sylvain Thenault, Emile Anclin This manpage was written by Emile Anclin <emile.anclin@logilab.fr> pyreverse August 18, 2008 pyreverse(1)