hasStereotype
Description
returns result
= hasStereotype(element
,stereotype
)true
if the stereotype stereotype
has been
applied on the model element element
.
Examples
Apply Stereotype and Find Applied Stereotypes
Create a model with a component.
model = systemcomposer.createModel("archModel"); systemcomposer.openModel("archModel"); arch = get(model,"Architecture"); comp = addComponent(arch,"Component");
Create a profile with a stereotype and properties, open the Profile Editor, then apply the profile to the model.
profile = systemcomposer.profile.Profile.createProfile("LatencyProfile"); latencybase = profile.addStereotype("LatencyBase"); latencybase.addProperty("latency",Type="double"); latencybase.addProperty("dataRate",Type="double",DefaultValue="10"); systemcomposer.profile.editor(profile) model.applyProfile("LatencyProfile");
Apply the stereotype to the component. Find if the stereotypes are applied on the component.
comp.applyStereotype("LatencyProfile.LatencyBase"); result = hasStereotype(comp,"LatencyProfile.LatencyBase")
result = logical 1
Input Arguments
element
— Architectural element
architecture object | component object | port object | connector object | physical connector object | allocation object | function object | data interface object | value type object | physical interface object | service interface object
Architectural element, specified as one these objects:
stereotype
— Stereotype
character vector | string | stereotype object
Stereotype, specified as a character vector or string in the form
"<profile>.<stereotype>"
or a systemcomposer.profile.Stereotype
object.
Data Types: char
| string
Output Arguments
result
— Query result
1
(true
) | 0
(false
)
Query result, returned as 1
(true
) or 0
(false
).
Data Types: logical
More About
Definitions
Term | Definition | Application | More Information |
---|---|---|---|
architecture | A System Composer™ architecture represents a system of components and how they interface with each other structurally and behaviorally. |
Different types of architectures describe different aspects of systems. You can use views to visualize a subset of components in an architecture. You can define parameters on the architecture level using the Parameter Editor. | |
root | A root is at the top of an architecture hierarchy. A root architecture has a boundary defined by its architecture ports that surround the system of interest. | The root architecture has a system boundary surrounding your architecture model. You can add architecture ports that define interfaces across the boundary. | |
model | A System Composer model is the file that contains architectural information, such as components, ports, connectors, interfaces, and behaviors. |
Perform operations on a model:
A System Composer model is stored as an SLX file. | Create Architecture Model with Interfaces and Requirement Links |
component | A component is a replaceable part of a system that fulfills a clear function in the context of an architecture. A component defines an architectural element, such as a function, another system, hardware, software, or other conceptual entity. A component can also be a subsystem or subfunction. | Represented as a block, a component is a part of an architecture model that can be separated into reusable artifacts. Transfer information between components with:
| |
port | A port is a node on a component or architecture that represents a point of interaction with its environment. A port permits the flow of information to and from other components or systems. |
| |
connector | Connectors are lines that provide connections between ports. Connectors describe how information flows between components or architectures. | A connector allows two components to interact without defining the nature of the interaction. Set an interface on a port to define how the components interact. |
Term | Definition | Application | More Information |
---|---|---|---|
stereotype | Stereotypes provide a mechanism to extend the core language elements and add domain-specific metadata. | Apply stereotypes to core element types. An element can have multiple stereotypes. Stereotypes allow you to style different elements. Stereotypes provide elements with a common set of properties, such as mass, cost, and power. | |
property | A property is a field in a stereotype. You can specify property values for each element to which the stereotype is applied. | Use properties to store quantitative characteristics, such as weight or speed, that are associated with a model element. Properties can also be descriptive or represent a status. You can view and edit the properties of each element in the architecture model using the Property Inspector. For more information, see Use Property Inspector in System Composer. | |
profile | A profile is a package of stereotypes. | You can use profiles to create a domain of specialized element types. Author profiles and apply profiles to a model using the Profile Editor. You can store stereotypes for a project in one or several profiles. When you save profiles, they are stored in XML files. |
Term | Definition | Application | More Information |
---|---|---|---|
interface data dictionary | An interface data dictionary is a consolidated list of interfaces and value types in an architecture and where you use them in the architecture. | You can save local interfaces on a System Composer model in an interface data dictionary using the Interface Editor. You can reuse data dictionaries between models that need to use a given set of interfaces, elements, and value types. Data dictionaries that you link to models are stored in separate SLDD files. | |
data interface | A data interface defines the kind of information that flows through a port. The same interface can be assigned to multiple ports. A data interface can be composite, meaning that it can include data elements that describe the properties of an interface signal. | Data interfaces represent the information that is shared through a connector and enters or exits a component through a port. Use the Interface Editor to create and manage data interfaces and data elements and store them in an interface data dictionary for reuse between models. | |
data element | A data element describes a portion of an interface, such as a communication message, a calculated or measured parameter, or other decomposition of that interface. |
Data interfaces are decomposed into data elements:
| |
value type | A value type can be used as a port interface to define the atomic piece of data that flows through that port and has a top-level type, dimension, unit, complexity, minimum, maximum, and description. | You can also assign the type of data elements in data interfaces to value types. Add value types to data dictionaries using the Interface Editor so that you can reuse the value types as interfaces or data elements. | Create Value Types as Interfaces |
owned interface | An owned interface is an interface that is local to a specific port and not shared in a data dictionary or the model dictionary. | Create an owned interface to represent a value type or data interface that is local to a port. | Define Owned Interfaces Local to Ports |
adapter | An adapter connects two components with incompatible port interfaces by mapping between the two interfaces. An adapter can act as a unit delay, rate transition, or merge. You can also use an adapter for bus creation. Use the Adapter block to implement an adapter. |
With an adapter, you can perform functions on the Interface Adapter dialog box:
|
Term | Definition | Application | More Information |
---|---|---|---|
physical subsystem | A physical subsystem is a Simulink® subsystem with Simscape™ connections. | A physical subsystem with Simscape connections uses a physical network approach suited for simulating systems with real physical components and represents a mathematical model. | Implement Component Behavior Using Simscape |
physical port | A physical port represents a Simscape physical modeling connector port called a Connection Port (Simscape). | Use physical ports to connect components in an architecture model or to enable physical systems in a Simulink subsystem. | Define Physical Ports on Component |
physical connector | A physical connector can represent a nondirectional conserving connection of a specific physical domain. Connectors can also represent physical signals. | Use physical connectors to connect physical components that represent features of a system to simulate mathematically. | Architecture Model with Simscape Behavior for a DC Motor |
physical interface | A physical interface defines the kind of
information that flows through a physical port. The same interface can be assigned to multiple
ports. A physical interface is a composite interface equivalent to a | Use a physical interface to bundle physical elements to describe a physical model using at least one physical domain. | Specify Physical Interfaces on Ports |
physical element | A physical element describes the
decomposition of a physical interface. A physical element is equivalent to a | Define the | Describe Component Behavior Using Simscape |
Version History
Introduced in R2021a
See Also
Tools
Blocks
Objects
systemcomposer.profile.Profile
|systemcomposer.profile.Stereotype
|systemcomposer.profile.Property
Functions
systemcomposer.profile.Profile.createProfile
|systemcomposer.loadProfile
|applyProfile
|removeProfile
|renameProfile
|systemcomposer.profile.editor
|systemcomposer.profile.Profile.find
|systemcomposer.profile.Profile.load
|save
|open
|close
|systemcomposer.profile.Profile.closeAll
|systemcomposer.profile.Stereotype.find
|getDefaultStereotype
|setDefaultStereotype
|getDefaultElementStereotype
|setDefaultElementStereotype
|addStereotype
|removeStereotype
|getStereotype
|applyStereotype
|batchApplyStereotype
|getStereotypes
|changeStereotype
|removeStereotype
|addProperty
|removeProperty
|hasProperty
|setProperty
|getProperty
|getPropertyValue
|getEvaluatedPropertyValue
|getStereotypeProperties
|applyStereotypeOrder
|getStereotypeNamesByOrder
|increaseStereotypeOrder
|decreaseStereotypeOrder
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