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Conglomeration ? Realizing Alias Protection
Canberra, Australia January 31-February 03
DOI Bookmark: http://doi.ieeecomputersociety.org/10.1109/ACSC.2000.824402Australasian Computer Science Conference
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John Potter, University of New South Wales
James Noble, Victoria University of Wellington
Composition and aggregation are widely used in UML analysis and design models to represent part-whole structures. Neither kind of association places any restriction on how the parts may be used from outside the whole object; this can lead to a number of problems if a part object is aliased from outside. Conglomeration realizes a stronger form of encapsulation than does composition. Parts of conglomerate objects are protected from external access. By imposing instance-level consistency conditions on part-whole relationships, conglomeration can make UML models easier to build, understand, and implement correctly.
Citation:
John Potter, James Noble, "Conglomeration ? Realizing Alias Protection," acsc, pp.189, Australasian Computer Science Conference, 2000
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