Issue 11886: use of stereotype names in UML model examples is inconsistent (marte-ftf) Source: Carleton University (Dr. Dorina C. Petriu, petriu(at)sce.carleton.ca) Nature: Uncategorized Issue Severity: Summary: b) The first letter of a stereotype applied to a UML model element should be lower-case or upper-case (e.g., <<gaScenario>> or <<GaScenario>>) ? The use of stereotype names in UML model examples is inconsistent in different chapters: starting with lower-case in chapters 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, etc. and with upper case in chapters 10 (Figures 10.20 to 10.22), 17. Resolution: By convention, when a stereotype is applied to a model element, the first letter of the stereotype name must be lower-case. In the examples mentioned in the summary of the issue, the first letter of stereotype names must be set to lower-case. Revised Text: For the following figures, the first letter of stereotype names must be set to lower-case: - Fig 10.20, p.114 - Fig 10.21, p.115 - Fig 10.22, p.116 - Fig 11.18, p.132 - Fig 17.9, p.325 - Fig 17.10, p.326 - Fig 17.14, p.329 - Fig 17.15, p.330 - Fig 17.16, p.331 - Fig 17.17, p.332 - Fig 17.19, p.334 - Fig 17.21, p.336 - Fig 17.22, p.337 - Fig 17.23, p.337 - Fig 17.24, p.338 - Fig 17.26, p.339 - Fig 17.27, p.341 Actions taken: December 21, 2007: received issue February 17, 2010: closed issue Discussion: End of Annotations:===== X-YMail-OSG: lqshkNUVM1kUkjN2Lv17_DW5EJmwMszKFQeptBwCavnob2ZdIq8h4S4TWrsbAlO6jQ-- Date: Fri, 21 Dec 2007 23:36:54 -0500 From: "Dorina C. Petriu" Organization: Carleton University User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.7 (Windows/20050923) X-Accept-Language: en-us, en To: issues@omg.org Cc: petriu@sce.carleton.ca Subject: MARTE GQAM-PAM: some issues The following issues refer to the PAM and GQAM chapters from the MARTE document ptc/07-08-04: b) The first letter of a stereotype applied to a UML model element should be lower-case or upper-case (e.g., <> or <>) ? The use of stereotype names in UML model examples is inconsistent in different chapters: starting with lower-case in chapters 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, etc. and with upper case in chapters 10 (Figures 10.20 to 10.22), 17.