Issue 9599: New issue on notation for multiple stereotypes (uml2-rtf) Source: (Mr. Tom Rutt, nobody) Nature: Uncategorized Issue Severity: Summary: Description of Problem Section 18.3.8 has the following paragraph: “ Presentation Options If multiple stereotypes are applied to an element, it is possible to show this by enclosing each stereotype name within a pair of guillemets and listing them after each other. A tool can choose whether it will display stereotypes or not. In particular, some tools can choose not to display “required stereotypes,” but to display only their attributes (tagged values) if any. “ Annex B has the following paragraph: “ If multiple keywords and/or stereotype names apply to the same model element, they all appear between the same pair of guillemets, separated by commas: “«” <label> [“,” <label>]* “»” “ These two paragraphs seem to contradict each other, since the annex B does not allow multiple guillemet pairs for the same element, while 18.3.8 does. Proposed Solution: Add clarification that Both presentation options should be allowed. Resolution: Revised Text: Actions taken: April 24, 2006: received issue Discussion: End of Annotations:===== te: Mon, 24 Apr 2006 13:16:12 -0500 From: Tom Rutt Reply-To: tom@coastin.com User-Agent: Mozilla Thunderbird 1.0.7 (Windows/20050923) X-Accept-Language: en-us, en To: Juergen Boldt , issues@omg.org Subject: New issue on notation for multiple stereotypes New ISSUE Proposal: Document PTC/06-04-02 ­ UML Superstructure 2.1 RTF Convenience Doc Source: Tom Rutt (Fujitsu) trutt@us.fujitsu.com Description of Problem Section 18.3.8 has the following paragraph: . Presentation Options If multiple stereotypes are applied to an element, it is possible to show this by enclosing each stereotype name within a pair of guillemets and listing them after each other. A tool can choose whether it will display stereotypes or not. In particular, some tools can choose not to display .required stereotypes,. but to display only their attributes (tagged values) if any. . Annex B has the following paragraph: . If multiple keywords and/or stereotype names apply to the same model element, they all appear between the same pair of guillemets, separated by commas: .«.