Historia De Uml
In the eighties, a growing number of companies began using OOP to build applications,
which generated the need for a standard process analysis and object -oriented design.
Manyresearchers (including Booch, Rumbaugh and Jacobson) produced and
promoted, on their own separate processes to meet this need. Each of these
processes had its own notation, or "language" (in the form ofgraphical diagrams) to
transmit the results of the analysis and design.
In the above text as we see throughout history began with certain disadvantages for
the development of processes, and theybegan to use different programming
languages.
In the early nineties, many companies (and even different divisions within the same
company) used their own unique processes and notations. At the sametime, these
companies wanted to use software tools that have support for their particular
processes. With so many processes, made it difficult for software vendors provide such
tools. It wasobviously necessary to have a notation and a standard process.
The different processes that generated the pattern given companies for software
developers began to seek new options that likewise resultedin the development of new
diagrams for maximum advantage in the production of any external systems to which
you could extract information.
In 1994, James Rumbaugh joined Grady Booch at RationalSoftware Corporation (now
a division of IBM), and began working to unify their popular processes, soon joined
them Ivar Jacobson. In 1996 the group released the first version of UML for softwareengineering community, requesting feedback. Almost simultaneously, an organization
known as the Object Management Group issued an invitation to participate in the
creation of a common modeling language.The OMG (www.omg.org) is a nonprofit
organization that promotes the standardization of object -oriented technologies, issuing
guidelines and specifications such as UML. Several companies (including...
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