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Systems Modelling with SysML Training Course
Course
Online
Description
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Type
Course
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Methodology
Online
This course is offered in two variants to provide a practical understanding of how systems can be modelling using the OMG's Systems Modelling Language (SysML) newest version 1.4. The notation and underlying semantics of SysML are explained in a way that allows students to apply what they learn to any suitable system modelling method or tool.
About this course
Students who wish to attend this course are not required to have any prior exposure to system modelling but should have a solid grasp of “document centric” systems engineering techniques.
Reviews
Subjects
- UML training
- UML
- Proxy
- Semantics
- Syntax
- Logic
- Web
- Systems
- SysML
- IT
Course programme
- What is a system model?
- The four pillars of system modelling
- Model centric vs document centric
- What is SysML?
- Relationship between SysML and UML
- The four pillars of SysML
- Profiles, stereotypes and tags
- Diagram frames
- Comments
- Allocations
- What is a requirement?
- Modelling atomic requirements
- Requirement traceability
- Modelling flow-based logic
- Actions vs activities
- Understanding token flow
- Control flow vs object flow
- Modelling decisions · Modelling concurrency
- Swimlanes and responsibility
- The system as a black box
- Identifying the system boundary with actors
- Use cases as system services
- Behind the use case diagram
- Use case structure · Nominal and alternative scenarios
- Handling common behaviour
- Extended and specialised behaviour
- What is a block?
- Block features
- Modelling types
- Modelling system hierarchy
- Generalising system elements
- Parts revisited
- Ports with Flow Properties
- Standard ports and interfaces
- Proxy ports and interface blocks
- Full ports
- What is a constraint block?
- Constraining system properties
- What is a package?
- Structuring the model with packages
- Package containment
- Package dependencies
- Representing the model structure
- Views and viewpoints
- Interaction-based behaviour
- Simple sequences
- Synchronous vs asynchronous
- Fragment nodes
- Interaction use nodes
- States and their syntax
- Transitions between states
- Pseudo state notation (initial, decision, history, end)
- Decomposing states
- Modelling concurrent states
- Suggested web resources
- Recommended literature
Additional information
Systems Modelling with SysML Training Course