Logic Diagram: Difference between revisions
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In the OSE sense of the word, we mean a Diagram of How it Works - most closely captured as a [[Functional Block Diagram]]. | In the OSE sense of the word, we mean a Diagram of How it Works - most closely captured as a [[Functional Block Diagram]]. | ||
See [[Activity Diagram]]. | See [[Activity Diagram]] (what is accomplished), [[Actions]] (how an activity is accomplished), | ||
See [[Block Diagram]]. | |||
It can be a mixture of a [[Workflow]], [[Functional Flow Block Diagram]], [[Function Model]], [[Logic Model]], [[Functional Diagram]], [[Flowchart]], [[Business Process Model]], [[Flow Process Chart]]. | It can be a mixture of a [[Workflow]], [[Functional Flow Block Diagram]], [[Function Model]], [[Logic Model]], [[Functional Diagram]], [[Flowchart]], [[Business Process Model]], [[Flow Process Chart]]. |
Revision as of 21:39, 24 January 2017
In the OSE sense of the word, we mean a Diagram of How it Works - most closely captured as a Functional Block Diagram.
See Activity Diagram (what is accomplished), Actions (how an activity is accomplished),
See Block Diagram.
It can be a mixture of a Workflow, Functional Flow Block Diagram, Function Model, Logic Model, Functional Diagram, Flowchart, Business Process Model, Flow Process Chart.
Logic refers to how something works from the control perspective. This includes operation logic, sequence, and feedback for systems that may involve automation. This is not about logic gates in circuits, though the topics are related.
Diagramming software (cloud-collaborative-realtime-embeddable) should be used.