Re: ER Diagrams



On 2003.04.08 18:24 Carol Farlow Lerche wrote:

some of the previous posts have been a bit strong.  Executive summary
of this post: it would be useful if dia/tedia2sql supported the
variants of ER notation known as crow's foot and IDEF1X as well as UML
notation, because conceptual data models in these notations have been
found by some to be easier to convey to the business stakeholders than
ones using UML class notation.

IDEF1X is in the works.  IE is my second priority.

I would not say that UML has eliminated the use of ER diagrams, as was
stated in a prior post, although there is certainly a faction that
holds that UML diagramming is the only thing worth using.  UML is
recognized even by its proponents as being more complex and harder to
use for communication to the non-technical members of a project.  This
is a religious war.  I would prefer to say that both are useful,
instead of instigating a battle of words.  You can translate ER
diagrams directly into UML diagrams, and there are some things that
can't be represented in an ER diagram that are representable in UML.
ER diagrams can be used for conceptual, logical, and physical
modelling.  I use them for all three, but the commercial
tools don't do a good job of transitioning from conceptual to logical
to physical.

Agreed.  We've had this discussion before (you subscribed?) although it was not stated as eloquently the 
first time around.  Speaking for myself, in the context of Dia, I haved used UML for ER diagrams because 
currently it's the best thing Dia has to do ER.

Andy



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