I am drawing some diagram, and I am wondering if it is acceptable for the actor to be in diagram more than once (for better transparency of the diagram)?
Thanks
I am drawing some diagram, and I am wondering if it is acceptable for the actor to be in diagram more than once (for better transparency of the diagram)?
Thanks
UMLDiagram
is a composition ofUMLDiagramElement
s, howeverActor
is NOTUmlDiagramElement
, it is anElement
. TheUMLDiagramElement
counterpart for Actor is eitherUMLShape
(when shown as icon/figure) orUMLClassifierShape
(when shown as a class box).You have to keep the concepts of "UML Model" and "UML Diagram" separate. Model is a conceptual representation of your domain, and diagram is a concrete visual representation of a model.
The two elements from Model and Diagram are then connected by an association (B.2.2).
The association is N:M (and unidirectional), the model doesn't care that it is being visualized.
As far as I can tell there is nothing that would restrict you from having several visual representations of a single actor.
Lastly as both Thomas and Geert mentioned, it is a bad practice. If your diagram is so complex that you want multiple representations you should probably decompose it.
Although UML does not forbid to use the same element more than once on a diagram, this is no good practice. Having the same UML element more than once on a diagram leads to confusion of the diagram reader. If you have the need to un-clutter connectors you probably already ran into a spider-web diagram style and you're better off to create several smaller diagrams.
Think of the implication: if any element appears more than once, then how would you know they are the same. This would lead to more confusion than it would actually help.