Milestone 5, Design Class Diagram, Sequence Diagram with View and Data Access Layers, Package Diagram

1. Design Class Diagram
Milestone 5 (Deliverable 8.1) (Design Class Diagram (DCD))

The team describes the software used to complete the diagram.

The team uses a rectangle with three compartments to represent classes. The name compartment (1st compartment) includes the stereotype name, class name, and superclass name (if any).

Stereotypes including an entity class, a boundary or view class, a controller class, and a data access class are placed within printer’s guillemets, like this: «control» pg. 376.

The lower two compartments contain more details about the attributes and the methods.
Second Compartment
Attributes: visiblity attribute-name: data-type-expression = initial-value {property}
Visibility: “+” = public/visible, “-” = private/invisible
Attribute name
Data-type-expression (such as character, string, integer, number, currency, or date)
Initial-value, if applicable
Property (within curly braces), such as {key}, if applicable

Third Compartment
Method signatures: visiblity method-name (parameter-list): return-type-expression

Interacting objects/classes are connected by navigation visibility arrows. One-to-many associations that indicate a superior/subordinate relationship are usually navigated from the superior to the subordinate. Mandatory associations are usually navigated from the independent class to the dependent class. Navigation visibility arrows may be bidirectional


The diagram is neat, free of spelling errors, and professional quality explained, labeled, and legible (without zooming).

The team develops a design class diagram encompassing domain classes, including controller class | handlers and attributes to represent ALL use cases.

2. Sequence Diagram with View and Data Access Layers

Milestone 5 (Deliverable 8.2) (Sequence Diagram with View and Data Access Layers)

The team describes the software used to complete the diagram.
The team describes the software used to complete the diagram.
The team uses a stick figure to represent an actor who interacts with the system.
The team represents lifelines for the actor and system using a dashed line pg. 409
The team uses boxes to represent instantiated objects from the corresponding classes
The team represents activation lifelines with vertical boxes on each lifeline
The team’s diagram has a :System object with simply a rectangle with the name of the object underlined

The team uses a solid arrow between the lifelines to represent the messages that are sent by the actor. AND Messages/commands are labeled to describe their purpose AND the input data in the message is in parenthesis

A dashed arrow is used to indicate a response or an answer from the system below the initiating message. The response is labeled with information returned.
The team represents return assignment with the “:=” operator

The team represents the same message sent multiple times in a loop. The term uses a loop frame. The loop frame indicates a loop condition with a small rectangle.

An exemplary project has an opt frame or an alt frame when possible pg. 142

The team uses a view object for each input message or form or screen. It is represented by a rectangle with a colon, the name of the object underlined, and the > notation underlined. The activation lifeline is a vertical box below each view object

The team uses a > object for each input message to write itself to the database and read to retrieve data in the database. It is represented by a rectangle with a colon, the name of the object underlined, and “DA” added to the name. Each data access object has a lifeline

The diagram is neat, free of spelling errors, and professional quality explained, labeled, and legible (without zooming).

The team creates a SSD with view and data access layers for ALL fully developed use cases.

3. Package Diagram

Milestone 5 (Deliverable 8.3) (Package Diagram)

The team describes the software used to complete the diagram.

The package diagram has three layers, view layer, domain layer, and data access layer.

The classes are placed inside the appropriate package based on the layer to which they belong.

The team uses a dashed arrow to represents a dependency relationship. The arrow’s tail is connected to the package that is dependent, and the arrowhead is connected to the independent package.

The diagram is neat, free of spelling errors, and professional quality explained, labeled, and legible (without zooming).

The team creates a package diagram with all views, domain classes, including controller class | handlers, and data access for ALL fully developed use cases.

————————————————————————————————–

So, I need three diagrams, and I will provide all the related files. The word file has most of the Project info to base the diagrams.

Ace Your Assignments! 🏆 - Hire a Professional Essay Writer Now!

Why Choose Our Essay Writing Service?

  • ✅ Original writing: Our expert writers will write each paper from scratch, ensuring complete originality, zero plagiarism and AI free content.
  • ✅ Expert Writers: Our seasoned professionals are ready to deliver top-quality papers tailored to your needs.
  • ✅ Guaranteed Good Grades: Impress your professors with outstanding work.
  • ✅ Fast Turnaround: Need it urgently? We've got you covered!
  • ✅ 100% Confidentiality: Customer privacy is our number one priority. Your identity is anonymous to our writers.
🎓 Why wait? Let us help you succeed! Our Writers are waiting..

Get started

Starts at $9 /page

How our paper writing service works

It's very simple!

  • Fill out the order form

    Complete the order form by providing as much information as possible, and then click the submit button.

  • Choose writer

    Select your preferred writer for the project, or let us assign the best writer for you.

  • Add funds

    Allocate funds to your wallet. You can release these funds to the writer incrementally, after each section is completed and meets your expected quality.

  • Ready

    Download the finished work. Review the paper and request free edits if needed. Optionally, rate the writer and leave a review.