Answer: True Page: 370 LOD: Medium
Answer: True Page: 372 LOD: Easy
Answer: True Page: 372 LOD: Easy
Answer: False Page: 372 LOD: Medium
Rationale: This describes encapsulation, not behavior.
Answer: True Page: 373 LOD: Easy
Answer: False Page: 373 LOD: Medium Rationale: An object class is a set of object instances that share the same attributes and behavior.
Answer: True Page: 373 LOD: Easy
Answer: True Page: 374 LOD: Easy
Answer: False Page: 374 LOD: Medium Rationale: A supertype is an object class whose instances store attributes that are common to one or more subtypes of the object class.
Answer: True Page: 376 LOD: Easy
Answer: True Page: 378 LOD: Easy
Answer: False Page: 380 LOD: Medium
Rationale: Polymorphism means ‘many forms.’ Applied to object-oriented techniques, it means that the same named behavior may be completed differently for different object classes.}
Answer: True Page: 382 LOD: Easy
Answer: True Page: 382 LOD: Medium
Answer: True Page: 382 LOD: Easy
Answer: True Page: 381 LOD: Medium
Answer: False Page: 371 LOD: Medium
Rationale: The current version of UML is 2.0.
Answer: True Page: 371 LOD: Medium
Answer: False Page: 382 LOD: Medium
Rationale: This describes State Machine diagrams.
Answer: True Page: 372 LOD: Easy
Answer: True Page: 373 LOD: Easy
Answer: False Page: 373-375 LOD: Medium
Rationale: Both Student and Teacher would be subtypes of a Person object class.
Answer: True Page: 378 LOD: Easy
Answer: False Page: 378 LOD: Medium
Rationale: In UML 2.0 the notation for aggregation has been dropped.