Issue 9824: Section: 15.3.14 Transition (uml2-rtf) Source: Paranor AG (Dr. Earl D. Waldin, ) Nature: Revision Severity: Minor Summary: In section 15.3.14, Transition, subsection Constraints you will find the following constraint: [6] An initial transition at the topmost level (region of a statemachine) either has no trigger or it has a trigger with the stereotype “create”. ... OCL body for constraint ... The element to be stereotyped in this constraint is a Trigger. If you look in Appendix C: Standard Stereotypes you will not find this stereotype. It appears that this constraint is left over from UML1.4/1.5. In UML 1.4 the corresponding stereotyped element in this constraint was an Event. In particular it was a CallEvent. The corresponding <<create>> stereotype is listed in Appendix C as a retired stereotype. So, either the constraint should be deleted or the stereotype must be brought out of retirement. Resolution: Revised Text: Actions taken: June 14, 2006: received issue Discussion: End of Annotations:===== m: webmaster@omg.org Date: 14 Jun 2006 11:02:17 -0400 To: Subject: Issue/Bug Report -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Name: Earl Waldin Company: Paranor AG mailFrom: ewaldin@paranor.ch Notification: Yes Specification: Unified Modeling Language: Superstructure Section: 15.3.14 Transition FormalNumber: formal/05-07-04 Version: 2.0 RevisionDate: August 2005 Page: 554 Nature: Revision Severity: Minor HTTP User Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.8.0.4) Gecko/20060508 Firefox/1.5.0.4 Description In section 15.3.14, Transition, subsection Constraints you will find the following constraint: [6] An initial transition at the topmost level (region of a statemachine) either has no trigger or it has a trigger with the stereotype .create.. ... OCL body for constraint ... The element to be stereotyped in this constraint is a Trigger. If you look in Appendix C: Standard Stereotypes you will not find this stereotype. It appears that this constraint is left over from UML1.4/1.5. In UML 1.4 the corresponding stereotyped element in this constraint was an Event. In particular it was a CallEvent. The corresponding <> stereotype is listed in Appendix C as a retired stereotype. So, either the constraint should be deleted or the stereotype must be brought out of retirement.