Explanation of the UML arrows

faya picture faya · Dec 9, 2009 · Viewed 315.5k times · Source

I have recently been studying UML and drawing simple diagrams with ordinary plain arrows between classes, but I know it's not enough. There are plenty of other arrows: generalization, realisation and etc. which have meaning to the diagram reader.

Is there a nice resource which could explain each arrow (ordinary, plain, dotted, diamond-filled, diamond)?

It would be the best if it will have some code examples for them.

Answer

Esther Fan - MSFT picture Esther Fan - MSFT · Feb 19, 2010

Here's some explanations from the Visual Studio 2015 docs:

UML Class Diagrams: Reference: https://msdn.microsoft.com/library/dd409437%28VS.140%29.aspx

UML class diagram

5: Association: A relationship between the members of two classifiers.

5a: Aggregation: An association representing a shared ownership relationship. The Aggregation property of the owner role is set to Shared.

5b: Composition: An association representing a whole-part relationship. The Aggregation property of the owner role is set to Composite.

9: Generalization: The specific classifier inherits part of its definition from the general classifier. The general classifier is at the arrow end of the connector. Attributes, associations, and operations are inherited by the specific classifier. Use the Inheritance tool to create a generalization between two classifiers.

Package diagram

13: Import: A relationship between packages, indicating that one package includes all the definitions of another.

14: Dependency: The definition or implementation of the dependent classifier might change if the classifier at the arrowhead end is changed.

Realization relationship

15: Realization: The class implements the operations and attributes defined by the interface. Use the Inheritance tool to create a realization between a class and an interface.

16: Realization: An alternative presentation of the same relationship. The label on the lollipop symbol identifies the interface.

UML Class Diagrams: Guidelines: http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/dd409416%28VS.140%29.aspx

Properties of an Association

Aggregation: This appears as a diamond shape at one end of the connector. You can use it to indicate that instances at the aggregating role own or contain instances of the other.

Is Navigable: If true for only one role, an arrow appears in the navigable direction. You can use this to indicate navigability of links and database relations in the software.


Generalization: Generalization means that the specializing or derived type inherits attributes, operations, and associations of the general or base type. The general type appears at the arrowhead end of the relationship.

Realization: Realization means that a class implements the attributes and operations specified by the interface. The interface is at the arrow end of the connector.

Let me know if you have more questions.