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Georgia Institute of Technology Object-Oriented Analysis Barb Ericson [email protected] June...
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Transcript of Georgia Institute of Technology Object-Oriented Analysis Barb Ericson [email protected] June...
Georgia Institute of Technology
Object-Oriented Analysis
Barb Ericson
June 2006
Georgia Institute of Technology
Learning Goals
• Understand at a practical level– How to identify objects and classes– How to record potential classes– How to record responsibilities– How to record fields and methods– How to record the relationships between
classes
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Objects and Classes
• To write an object-oriented program we need to identify the objects that we need to create– And determine how to classify them
• What data does an object need to keep about itself? These are the fields.
• What things should an object be able to do? These are the methods.
• Next we write a class for each classification of the needed objects
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Identifying Classes
• As you go through a scenario– Write down each noun you hear (or underline
each noun if the scenario is written)– Put each one at the top of an index card– Write down what objects of this class are
responsible for– Write down what other classes this object has
to work with to accomplish it’s responsibilities
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CRC Cards
• Class Responsibility Collaborators
• Developed by Ward Cunningham and Kent Beck at Tektronix in the late 1980’s
• Analysis technique
Classname
Responsibilities Collaborators
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Use and Advantages
• Used to– Record classes as they are identified– Record the purpose (responsibility) of each
class– Record and experiment with relationships
(collaborators) between classes
• Advantages– cheap, portable, readily available, and familiar– focus on analysis, not on a diagram– good in a group discussion
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CRC Cards Example
• Do an analysis of a hotel room reservation system. – The system must allow clerks to assign rooms to
customers. It must also allow clerks to assign maids to clean the rooms.
Clerk
Maid
Customer
Room
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CRC Cards ExampleClerk
Checks customer in and out
Manages maids
Customer
Maid
MaidCleans room Room
Clerk
CustomerStays in hotel Room
Clerk
RoomPlace for customer to stay
Customer
Maid
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CRC Card ExampleClerk
Checks customer in and out
Assigns room
Handles payment
Manages maids
Assigns room
Customer
Maid
MaidCleans room
Assigned room
Cleans room
Room
Clerk
CustomerStays in hotel
Check in
Check out
Pay for room
Use phone
Room
Clerk
RoomPlace for customer to stay
Customer
Maid
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Abstraction
• Pull out only the important details about the thing we are simulating– Maids have hobbies but we don’t need to
know about them
• What is important in the context of the problem?– What data will objects of the class need– What things will they need to be able to do?
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Analysis of Selling Items on a Web Site
• We want to sell items on a web site and we need to keep track of our customers and their orders– Create CRC cards for this
• Do a walk through of placing an order– Did you find any new objects, data, or
methods that you might need?
• It can help to look at some sample web sites like amazon.com
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CRC Card Practice Ideas
• Do CRC cards for a game of battleship
• Do CRC cards for a game of blackjack
• Do CRC cards for a game of war
• Do CRC cards for a drawing program
• Do CRC cards for airplane flights
• Do CRC cards for a bookstore website
• Do CRC cards for an ATM
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Drawing Editor Exercise
• Identify the classes for a simple drawing editor. Also show the data and operations for the classes. – The editor can draw rectangles, circles, and triangles.
It can show connections between shapes with a a line. The shapes can be erased, moved, and rotated.
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Record Class Information
• Can use a UML Class Diagram– Unified Modeling Language
• Standard way to documents OO analysis, design, and implementations
• UML Specification – http://www.omg.org/technology/documents/
formal/uml.htm
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UML Tools
• Popular Tools– Rational Rose – http://www.rational.com
• Market leader but expensive
– Visio – http://www.microsoft.com/office/visio – Poseidon - http://www.gentleware.com/
• Free community edition
– ArgoUML - http://argouml.tigris.org/– Links to sites that list UML Tools is at– http://www.omg.org/technology/uml/index.htm
#Links-Methodologies
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Class Diagram
• Shows classes and the relationships between them – Static structure
• Not time dependent
• Most important and commonly used diagram in UML
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Class Representation
• Rectangles are used to represent classes
• There are different sections for the class name, attributes and operations
Class Name
Attribute1Attribute2
Operation1()Operation2()
Dog
sizeshape
wagTail()bark()
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Visibility
• Who can access the item• Types of Visibility
– Public (+)• All can use
– Private (-)• Only objects of the class
• Attributes should be private– So the object has control of its’ data
• Methods are public or private– Public if intended as a service. Private if for internal use.
Occasionally protected is used which subclasses can override
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Static Class Relationships
• Association– has-a – A connector has shapes
• Generalization– is-a-kind-of – A circle is a kind of shape
• Aggregation– is-a-part-of– A display list is an
aggregation (collection) of shapes
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Dynamic Class Relationship
• Dependency– Uses– A car uses a parking
space– It doesn’t have a have-
a relationship with it
• Dynamic relationships are relationships that change over time
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Association Multiplicities
• Associations have multiplicities (one for each end)– X can have how many objects of y associated with it?– Y can have how many objects of x associated with it?
• Kinds of Multiplicities– m..n
• Inclusive range from m to n
– n• There must be exactly n
– * or 0..*• 0 to many
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Roles
• Each association end is a role– role A– role B
• Roles can be explicitly named– Especially useful when
there is more than one association between the classes
– Or for use in generated code
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Class Diagram Perspectives
• There are three perspectives that a class diagram can represent– Conceptual - Analysis Stage
• Language independent, represents the domain
– Specification - Design Stage• Represents a high level design of the solution
– Implementation – Programming Stage• Represents the actual solution• Shows attributes, operations, types (if needed),
and parameters to operations
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Bingo Exercise
• What objects are there in Bingo?– What data do these objects have?– What things can they do?– How do you classify them?
• For each class in Bingo– What is the relationship with the other
classes?
• Draw a UML diagram for a Bingo Game
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UML Challenge
• Draw a class diagram for Solitaire
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Solitaire Class Diagram
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Summary• In Analysis you need to understand the objects
in the domain (“real world”)• Figure out what the objects are responsible for
– What data do they need to have?– What things can they do?
• UML class diagrams show lots of information in a picture– Can be helpful on exam questions
• About inheritance and polymorphism
• Determine the relationships between the classes– Has a (association)– Is a type of (inheritance)