Stereotype "display place" appearance property [message #1258853] |
Thu, 27 February 2014 20:48 |
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Hi,
The stereotype "display place" appearance property for a class shape
doesn't seem to work for me. I would expect the "Comment" and "With
brace" options (which should be "Within braces", btw) to show the
presentations suggested by the UML spec. However, the Comment option
has no effect in my class diagram and the braces option just moves the
stereotype keyword above the class name with some extra blank space.
Is this a known problem?
I'm on Mac OS X 10.9.2 on today's master (commit 2327a1b). I don't see
any relevant exceptions in the log.
The stereotype in question has a single-valued string attribute, a
multi-valued string attribute, and an enumeration attribute, all
inherited from a superstereotype. My stereotype application has values
for all of these.
Thanks,
Christian
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Re: Stereotype "display place" appearance property [message #1258873 is a reply to message #1258853] |
Thu, 27 February 2014 21:18 |
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Answered my own question ... I had to hit the little button that looks
like a console display on each of the applied stereotype's attributes
in order for them to be displayed.
For the comment display, however, the result is an empty comment shape
because of a ClassCastException in the log. Definitely a bug, that,
but a different matter.
Thanks,
Christian
On 2014-02-27 20:48:42 +0000, Christian W. Damus said:
> Hi,
>
> The stereotype "display place" appearance property for a class shape
> doesn't seem to work for me. I would expect the "Comment" and "With
> brace" options (which should be "Within braces", btw) to show the
> presentations suggested by the UML spec. However, the Comment option
> has no effect in my class diagram and the braces option just moves the
> stereotype keyword above the class name with some extra blank space.
>
> Is this a known problem?
>
> I'm on Mac OS X 10.9.2 on today's master (commit 2327a1b). I don't see
> any relevant exceptions in the log.
>
> The stereotype in question has a single-valued string attribute, a
> multi-valued string attribute, and an enumeration attribute, all
> inherited from a superstereotype. My stereotype application has values
> for all of these.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Christian
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