Hi,
On Tue, Oct 27, 2015 at 11:30 AM, Anne Etien <anne.etien(a)univ-lille1.fr>
wrote:
Hi,
For preparing my teaching course I would have love to have simple class
hierarchy visualisations or even better, real UML representations.
Unfortunately, the UML like diagram from the Moose panel is not zoomable.
There is a bug in the rendering of actions in the main window.
It is by default in light grey saying that it is
harder to read. It
contains all the attributes and all the methods so it is difficult to put
it in a single readable picture. Please make the experiment with the
Famix-Core classes.
I was not able to do easily a class hierarchy with the name of the
classes. After more than one hour, I gave up.
So it could be good, if we can have:
- a class hierarchy with only the names of the classes in boxes or not
- a class hierarchy with only attributes
- a class hierarchy with only methods
- the existing "UML" representation
- a real metamodel representation. Not as a system complexity
representation, but as a real UML representation meaning with inheritance
AND associations (those can be deduce from pragmas and now with the new
MooseQuery API, we get all the methods to do it).
The associations are represented as first class in Fame, but the reason we
do not show them is that we do not have a layout that supports such
associations.
It should be possible to easily specify which classes
we want to
represent.
It seems to me the minimum vital to do real analyses.
In my course, I wanted to show I extended FAMIX for SQL purpose. It was so
complex (because I don’t want not all FAMIX entity,
but just the one from
which the SQL classes inherit and without the methods) that once again I
gave up.
You can do it programatically. Take a look at MooseFameView>>viewFamixCore
to see how to show a selection of the classes from the default meta-model.
I think that for what you want, you should exhibit this
I don’t have enough time to better look for. But
anyway, I find it sad
that it is so hard even for people knowing (a bit) Moose of not being able
to do that.
I am sad that you are sad. Sadness can be conducive for meditation, but it
typically is not particularly promising for generating action :). So, let's
snap out of our sadness and focus on what should be done next.
Cheers,
Doru
Cheers,
Anne
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