Issue 13920: current definition of a 'local' transition does not allow the case to have a local transition (uml2-rtf) Source: International Business Machines (Mr. Adam Neal, adamneal(at)ca.ibm.com) Nature: Clarification Severity: Significant Summary: To properly and unambiguously constrain which Region 'should' own a transition, requires that the transition kind be used (further work on issue 10498). The current definition of a 'local' transition does not allow the case to have a local transition whose target is a composite state and source is nested within that composite state. It should be possible to assign this kind of transition local semantics, i.e., the composite state will not be exited nor entered; only the nested configuration of composite state will be affected as a result of exiting the nested source state and establishing a configuration for the composite state itself, i.e., the target. Resolution: Revised Text: Actions taken: May 5, 2009: received issue Discussion: End of Annotations:===== m: webmaster@omg.org Date: 05 May 2009 16:03:10 -0400 To: Subject: Issue/Bug Report -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Name: Adam Neal Company: IBM mailFrom: Adam_Neal@ca.ibm.com Notification: No Specification: UML Section: 15.3.15 FormalNumber: 08-05-05 Version: 2.2 RevisionDate: 08-05-05 Page: 589 Nature: Clarification Severity: Significant HTTP User Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.9.0.10) Gecko/2009042316 Firefox/3.0.10 (.NET CLR 3.5.30729) Description To properly and unambiguously constrain which Region 'should' own a transition, requires that the transition kind be used (further work on issue 10498). The current definition of a 'local' transition does not allow the case to have a local transition whose target is a composite state and source is nested within that composite state. It should be possible to assign this kind of transition local semantics, i.e., the composite state will not be exited nor entered; only the nested configuration of composite state will be affected as a result of exiting the nested source state and establishing a configuration for the composite state itself, i.e., the target.