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DCHARTS, A FORMALISM FOR
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Contents
Index
List of Figures
1.1.
The Finite State Automata syntax in an Entity-Relationship diagram
1.2.
Modeling and simulation based design process
1.3.
AToM
meta-modeling environment with the Entity-Relationship diagrams meta-model loaded
1.4.
AToM
meta-modeling environment with the PetriNet meta-model loaded
1.5.
AToM
meta-modeling environment with the statecharts meta-model loaded
1.6.
A simple FSA example
1.7.
The statecharts meta-model in an Entity-Relationship diagram
1.8.
Atomic DEVS state trajectory
1.9.
Generalization of DCharts
1.10.
Specification of DCharts
1.11.
Matrix of simulation and execution
2.1.
The DCharts meta-model in an Entity-Relationship diagram
2.2.
The AToM
development environment for DCharts
2.3.
An example of transition priorities
4.1.
An example of the graphical representation of a state hierarchy
4.2.
Alternate graphical representation of a state hierarchy in AToM
4.3.
An example of the graphical representation of orthogonal components
4.4.
Alternate graphical representation of orthogonal components in AToM
4.5.
An example of the graphical representation of default states and final states
4.6.
An example of the graphical representation of default states and final states with orthogonal components
4.7.
An example of the graphical representation of transitions
4.8.
Graphical representation of transitions in AToM
4.9.
An example of the graphical representation of history states
4.10.
Graphical representation of history states in
4.11.
An example of the graphical representation of enter actions and exit actions
4.12.
An example of the graphical representation of importation
4.13.
An example of the graphical representation of ports
4.14.
An example of the graphical representation of connections
4.15.
Alternate graphical representation of connections in AToM
4.16.
An example of the graphical representation of macros
5.1.
An invalid DCharts model that contains compound statements in the output
5.2.
A DCharts model that contains simple statements in the output
5.3.
An example of the transformation from a compound statement in the output into simple statements
5.4.
An example of the transformation from a conditional statement into guards
5.5.
An example of the transformation from a for-loop into multiple transitions
5.6.
An example of the transformation from a
break
statement into DCharts transitions
5.7.
An example of the transformation from a
continue
statement into DCharts transitions
5.8.
The three parts of a system
6.1.
SVM class design
6.2.
SVM default graphical interface
6.3.
SVM default textual interface
6.4.
AToM
modeling environment with SVM plugin
6.5.
Multiple layers for distributed simulation in SVM
6.6.
Sender
of the
Echo
example
6.7.
Echo
of the
Echo
example
6.8.
Name pattern of the
Echo
server
6.9.
Port name of the
Echo
server
8.1.
Java class hierarchy of state machines
8.2.
An example of the default textual interface of the Java code synthesized by SCC
8.3.
The graphical representation of a sample model for SCC
8.4.
Applet interface for the Java code synthesized from a DCharts model
9.1.
The MP3 player
9.2.
Traces of the software process model simulation
9.3.
The TCP system
9.4.
Overview of the TCP simulator
9.5.
The submodel of the client application
9.6.
The submodel of the TCP driver (for both client side and server side)
9.7.
The
ActiveClose
state of the TCP driver
9.8.
The
PassiveClose
state of the TCP driver
9.9.
The
Established
state of the TCP driver
9.10.
The submodel of the communication channel
9.11.
The submodel of the server application
9.12.
The virtual-time version of the communication channel
9.13.
The plot of the simulation result of the TCP model
Thomas Huining Feng 2004-04-28