Generating Java Code from UML Class and Sequence Diagrams

Author(s):  
Abilio G. Parada ◽  
Eliane Siegert ◽  
Lisane B. de Brisolara
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Gursimran Singh ◽  
Harpreet Kaur

With the growth of website content it is become difficult to manage relations between Individual webpage and keep track of their hyperlinks within a website. This causes some Hyperlink become dead or broken. A broken Link  is a  link on a web page that no longer works. It is difficult to find out the broken link manually by checking each hyperlink individually because it is time consuming and tedious work. So to eliminate this we can use the selenium web driver tool and java code to automate testing of each hyperlink individually. The objective of this thesis is to automate finding of broken links using selenium web driver tool.


2021 ◽  
Vol 180 ◽  
pp. 502-506
Author(s):  
Atif Mashkoor ◽  
Alexander Egyed

Author(s):  
Neville A. Stanton ◽  
James W. Brown ◽  
Kirsten M. A. Revell ◽  
Jisun Kim ◽  
Joy Richardson ◽  
...  

AbstractDesign of appropriate interaction and human–machine interfaces for the handover of control between vehicle automation and human driver is critical to the success of automated vehicles. Problems in this interfacing between the vehicle and driver have led, in some cases, to collisions and fatalities. In this project, Operator Event Sequence Diagrams (OESDs) were used to design the handover activities to and from vehicle automation. Previous work undertaken in driving simulators has shown that the OESDs can be used to anticipate the likely activities of drivers during the handover of vehicle control. Three such studies showed that there was a strong correlation between the activities drivers represented in OESDs and those observed from videos of drivers in the handover process, in driving simulators. For the current study, OESDs were constructed during the design of the interaction and interfaces for the handover of control to and from vehicle automation. Videos of drivers during the handover were taken on motorways in the UK and compared with the predictions from the OESDs. As before, there were strong correlations between those activities anticipated in the OESDs and those observed during the handover of vehicle control from automation to the human driver. This means that OESDs can be used with some confidence as part of the vehicle automation design process, although validity generalisation remains an important goal for future research.


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