This is why UML only belongs on a whiteboard. It makes it much harder to include unnecessary detail when you have to physically add it, and there’s hard real estate constraints.
This is why UML only belongs on a whiteboard. It makes it much harder to include unnecessary detail when you have to physically add it, and there’s hard real estate constraints.
> This is why UML only belongs on a whiteboard.
UML belongs in whiteboards, design documents, and project documentation. I don't know where else people expect to use it. I mean, does anyone expect to generate anything out of a sequence diagram?
I really meant that the constraints of drawing it by hand forces you to draw only what matters