Flow control is usually straightforward: sequence, selection, iteration. And many programmers, having been raised on these primary control structures, have a difficult time seeing what other kinds of flow control might be necessary. This article introduces continuations and teaches you to think about flow control in radically new ways.
Activity diagrams are a loosely defined diagram technique for showing workflows of stepwise activities and actions, with support for choice, iteration and concurrency.[1] In the Unified Modeling Language, activity diagrams can be used to describe the business and operational step-by-step workflows of components in a system. An activity diagram shows the overall flow of control.
P. KUMAR, J.SHANKAR, and Y.NAGARAJU. International Journal of Applied Control, Electrical and Electronics Engineering (IJACEEE), 1 (1):
19-30(May 2013)
P. KUMAR, J. SHANKAR, and Y. NAGARAJU. The International Journal of Applied Control, Electrical and Electronics Engineering (IJACEEE), 1 (1):
1-12(May 2013)
S. Ali, P. Roop, I. Warren, and Z. Bhatti. Service Oriented System Engineering (SOSE), 2011 IEEE 6th International Symposium on, page 93-101. (December 2011)