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I am designing UML Activity diagram in ArgoUML now. I know that if I want to design condition like:

if(condition) {
    doTrueAction();
} else {
    doFalseAction();
}

It could be done in UML activity diagram like following:

enter image description here

But what if we have another condition inside the output of the previous decision? Like this:

if(condition) {
    if(condition2) {
        condition2TrueAction();
    } else {
        condition2FalseAction();
    }
}else{
    conditionFalseAction();
}

enter image description here

As you see conditionTrueOutput is being output and condition at the same time here. It seems to me that design is broken.

Edit: Or I should use fork element instead of decision (diamond) element?

enter image description here

I want to know how to design this correctly. Is there any rule?

2
  • 2
    The fork is used to mark the activities as parallel ones, that is not your case. Anyway, one or more join have to follow a fork.
    – acornagl
    Sep 18, 2016 at 12:57
  • @acornagl Yes, you are right.
    – Vanguard
    Sep 19, 2016 at 4:47

2 Answers 2

2

There's a wrong assumption in your thoughts. A Decision has no output. It just has conditional control flows leaving it. Each can be guarded by a certain condition. This guard is written in square braces:

enter image description here

Note that I did not write the (implicit) [true] guard after the first test (rather by sloppiness when editing, but actually it can be omitted).

Edit My first though that your diagram has another flaw in that the actions have no control flow going out was incorrect. Actually Superstructures state that a missing outgoing control flow is equivalent to an FlowFinal after processing the Action. So your diagram is correct here.

Regarding your edit: as the comment says, this is for parallel continuation. Nested conditions need to be like shown above.

Edit2 As Ister noted in the comments, a Decision can have more than just the if and else control flow going out, but an arbitrary number greater than 1. The UML 2.5 states on p. 388:

If exactly one target of an unblocked outgoing edge accepts the token, then the token traverses the corresponding edge and all other offers are withdrawn. If multiple targets accept the token simultaneously, then the token traverses only one of the edges corresponding to the accepting targets, but which one is not determined by this specification.

In order to avoid non-deterministic behavior, the modeler should arrange that at most one guard evaluate to true for each incoming token. If it can be ensured that only one guard will evaluate to true, a conforming implementation is not required to evaluate the guards on all outgoing edges once one has been found to evaluate to true.

For use only with DecisionNodes, a predefined guard “else” (represented as an Expression with “else” as its operator and no operands) may be used for at most one outgoing edge. This guard evaluates to true only if the token is not accepted by any other outgoing edge from the DecisionNode.

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  • @pyramidPeak : Thomas is right, but one thing is incorrect in his diagram. The conditions should not be placed as a label near the diamond, but between square brackets along the control flows. One flow has [condition] and the other has [condition = false]. Alternatively, the condition may be placed inside the diamond and the guard expressions near the control flows would then be [=true] and [=false] (note the equals sign). See UML 2.5 spec, figures 14.25 for examples. Sep 18, 2016 at 16:43
  • @Thomas: it is not necessary to use an ActivityFinalNode. From the UML 2.5 spec: "The execution of an Activity with no streaming Parameters completes when it has no nodes executing and no nodes enabled for execution, or when it is explicitly terminated using an ActivityFinalNode."
    – Jim L.
    Sep 18, 2016 at 17:13
  • @JimL. Thanks for this. Probably I got used to using the Final to make it explicit. Will update the answer.
    – qwerty_so
    Sep 18, 2016 at 17:34
  • Another related common misconception is that an InitialNode is required. In most cases it is superfluous. An action that has no incoming edges can start executing as soon as the containing activity activates.
    – Jim L.
    Sep 18, 2016 at 18:09
  • 1
    There is no "superstructures" anymore, since UML 2.5. I don't know if it's called out explicitly or not in UML 2.5. I think it is called out in fUML, which clarifies the UML semantics. fUML has test cases that ensure this works properly.
    – Jim L.
    Sep 18, 2016 at 19:18
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It seems that your design is coherent but it is not a UML diagram. I suppose that you are mixing the activity diagram with the sequence diagram.

Your diagram looks like a sequence diagram but it tries to represent information that are related to the activity diagrams.

I suggest you this web site to investigate on the differences between the two diagrams, I hope it can help you.

Instead, by trying to use your design, what I suggest you is to insert another condition (e.g. SecondConditionAction) before the two condotion2.

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