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So far Bruce Silver has created 524 blog entries.

DMN: Dealing with Nothing

By |2020-09-23T07:29:04-07:00September 23rd, 2020|DMN|

They used to say Seinfeld was a show about Nothing. But given its enduring influence on popular culture, Nothing is clearly not nothing. Attention must be paid. In DMN, as well, Nothing demands attention. In simple models like the ones we study in my DMN Method and Style Basics and Advanced training, it doesn't come [...]

Calling REST Services from DMN

By |2020-08-26T13:34:43-07:00August 26th, 2020|DMN|

One of the basic principles of DMN is that decision services are stateless, meaning that given the same set of input data values, the service output will always be the same.  But sometimes it is convenient to break that rule with tool-specific extensions.  For example, in Trisotech Decision Modeler the FEEL built-in functions Today and [...]

BPMN Decoded: Data Flow

By |2020-07-27T13:35:44-07:00July 27th, 2020|BPMN|

Last time I talked about how information is passed to a BPMN process from outside.  All modelers need to understand that.  This month I'm going to talk about data inside a BPMN process.  If you are a typical process modeler, this is something you can usually safely ignore, because it pertains only to executable models.  [...]

BPMN Basics: Providing Information to a Process

By |2020-06-22T13:18:39-07:00June 22nd, 2020|BPMN|

One aspect of BPMN that usually surprises newbies is attention to what entities or actors are inside the process vs outside.  In traditional flowcharting, for example, the Customer is often represented as a swimlane in the Seller's process, but not so in BPMN.  A BPMN process represents one participant's view of the steps, that of [...]

CMMN Method and Style – Part 2

By |2020-05-27T09:46:46-07:00May 27th, 2020|CMMN|

Last month I provided a brief overview of the Case Management Model and Notation (CMMN) standard. As it does for BPMN, Method and Style provides CMMN with additional diagrammatic conventions aimed at making the logic understandable from the printed diagrams alone. These conventions are formulated as "style rules" that can be applied as validation in [...]

CMMN Method and Style – Part 1

By |2020-04-29T09:35:23-07:00April 29th, 2020|CMMN|

Case Management Model and Notation (CMMN) is the poor stepchild of process modeling standards.  It was developed a decade ago, around the same time as BPMN 2.0 and largely as a reaction to it by vendors who believed that "real" business processes were about knowledge workers interpreting documents, not web services orchestration following rigid rules.  [...]

Modeling Virus Transmission on an Airplane

By |2020-03-29T12:50:47-07:00March 29th, 2020|DMN|

As I write this, everyone is freaking out over COVID-19.  We know it is a highly contagious and dangerous disease, with particular risk to groups in a confined space such as an airplane or cruise ship.  Researchers are scrambling to model the contagion risk, but detailed data is almost nonexistent.  With a good model, you [...]

Using Decision Services

By |2020-02-24T14:13:05-08:00February 24th, 2020|DMN|

In recent posts I reviewed the use and benefits of BKMs and contexts for DMN modelers and stakeholders.  This time we'll continue that theme with an explanation of another of DMN's woefully underutilized features, decision services. The introduction of decision service as a formal element in DMN came about in a surprising way.  The spec's [...]

Use Contexts to Simplify Your Decision Models

By |2020-01-08T09:28:46-08:00January 8th, 2020|DMN|

Last time I showed the value of Business Knowledge Models (BKMs), those misunderstood and often-maligned elements in DMN diagrams.  In this post I'm going to try to do the same for contexts, another DMN feature that is similarly underappreciated and frequently disparaged by tool vendors that don't support them. Unlike BKMs, contexts are not DRG [...]

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This Sliding Bar can be switched on or off in theme options, and can take any widget you throw at it or even fill it with your custom HTML Code. Its perfect for grabbing the attention of your viewers. Choose between 1, 2, 3 or 4 columns, set the background color, widget divider color, activate transparency, a top border or fully disable it on desktop and mobile.
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