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Flowchart

A flowchart is a type of diagram that represents a workflow or process. A flowchart can also be defined as a diagrammatic representation of an algorithm, a step-by-step approach to solving a task.

A simple flowchart representing a process for dealing with a non-functioning lamp.

The flowchart shows the steps as boxes of various kinds, and their order by connecting the boxes with arrows. This diagrammatic representation illustrates a solution model to a given problem. Flowcharts are used in analyzing, designing, documenting or managing a process or program in various fields.[1]

Overview

 
Flow diagram a C-style for loop, representing the following code:
for(i=0;i<5;i++) printf("*"); 
The loop will cause five asterisks to be printed.

Flowcharts are used to design and document simple processes or programs. Like other types of diagrams, they help visualize the process. Two of the many benefits are flaws and bottlenecks may become apparent. Flowcharts typically use the following main symbols:

  • A process step, usually called an activity, is denoted as a rectangular box.
  • A decision is usually denoted as a diamond.

A flowchart is described as "cross-functional" when the chart is divided into different vertical or horizontal parts, to describe the control of different organizational units. A symbol appearing in a particular part is within the control of that organizational unit. A cross-functional flowchart allows the author to correctly locate the responsibility for performing an action or making a decision, and to show the responsibility of each organizational unit for different parts of a single process.

Flowcharts represent certain aspects of processes and are usually complemented by other types of diagram. For instance, Kaoru Ishikawa defined the flowchart as one of the seven basic tools of quality control, next to the histogram, Pareto chart, check sheet, control chart, cause-and-effect diagram, and the scatter diagram. Similarly, in UML, a standard concept-modeling notation used in software development, the activity diagram, which is a type of flowchart, is just one of many different diagram types.

Nassi-Shneiderman diagrams and Drakon-charts are an alternative notation for process flow.

Common alternative names include: flow chart, process flowchart, functional flowchart, process map, process chart, functional process chart, business process model, process model, process flow diagram, work flow diagram, business flow diagram. The terms "flowchart" and "flow chart" are used interchangeably.

The underlying graph structure of a flowchart is a flow graph, which abstracts away node types, their contents and other ancillary information.

History

The first structured method for documenting process flow, the "flow process chart", was introduced by Frank and Lillian Gilbreth in the presentation "Process Charts: First Steps in Finding the One Best Way to do Work", to members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) in 1921.[2] The Gilbreths' tools quickly found their way into industrial engineering curricula. In the early 1930s, an industrial engineer, Allan H. Mogensen began to train business people in the use of some of the tools of industrial engineering at his Work Simplification Conferences in Lake Placid, New York.

Art Spinanger, a 1944 graduate of Mogensen's class, took the tools back to Procter and Gamble where he developed their Deliberate Methods Change Program. Ben S. Graham, another 1944 graduate, Director of Formcraft Engineering at Standard Register Industrial, applied the flow process chart to information processing with his development of the multi-flow process chart, to present multiple documents and their relationships.[3] In 1947, ASME adopted a symbol set derived from Gilbreth's original work as the "ASME Standard: Operation and Flow Process Charts."[4]

Douglas Hartree in 1949 explained that Herman Goldstine and John von Neumann had developed a flowchart (originally, diagram) to plan computer programs.[5] His contemporary account was endorsed by IBM engineers[6] and by Goldstine's personal recollections.[7] The original programming flowcharts of Goldstine and von Neumann can be found in their unpublished report, "Planning and coding of problems for an electronic computing instrument, Part II, Volume 1" (1947), which is reproduced in von Neumann's collected works.[8]

The flowchart became a popular tool for describing computer algorithms, but its popularity decreased in the 1970s, when interactive computer terminals and third-generation programming languages became common tools for computer programming, since algorithms can be expressed more concisely as source code in such languages. Often pseudo-code is used, which uses the common idioms of such languages without strictly adhering to the details of a particular one.

In the early 21st century, flowcharts were still used for describing computer algorithms.[9] Modern techniques such as UML activity diagrams and Drakon-charts can be considered to be extensions of the flowchart.

Types

Sterneckert (2003) suggested that flowcharts can be modeled from the perspective of different user groups (such as managers, system analysts and clerks), and that there are four general types:[10]

  • Document flowcharts, showing controls over a document-flow through a system
  • Data flowcharts, showing controls over a data-flow in a system
  • System flowcharts, showing controls at a physical or resource level
  • Program flowchart, showing the controls in a program within a system

Notice that every type of flowchart focuses on some kind of control, rather than on the particular flow itself.[10]

However, there are some different classifications. For example, Andrew Veronis (1978) named three basic types of flowcharts: the system flowchart, the general flowchart, and the detailed flowchart.[11] That same year Marilyn Bohl (1978) stated "in practice, two kinds of flowcharts are used in solution planning: system flowcharts and program flowcharts...".[12] More recently, Mark A. Fryman (2001) identified more differences: "Decision flowcharts, logic flowcharts, systems flowcharts, product flowcharts, and process flowcharts are just a few of the different types of flowcharts that are used in business and government".[13]

In addition, many diagram techniques are similar to flowcharts but carry a different name, such as UML activity diagrams.

Building blocks

Common symbols

The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) set standards for flowcharts and their symbols in the 1960s.[14] The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) adopted the ANSI symbols in 1970.[15] The current standard, ISO 5807, was revised in 1985.[16] Generally, flowcharts flow from top to bottom and left to right.[17]

ANSI/ISO Shape Name Description
  Flowline (Arrowhead)[15] Shows the process's order of operation. A line coming from one symbol and pointing at another.[14] Arrowheads are added if the flow is not the standard top-to-bottom, left-to right.[15]
  Terminal[14] Indicates the beginning and ending of a program or sub-process. Represented as a stadium,[14] oval or rounded (fillet) rectangle. They usually contain the word "Start" or "End", or another phrase signaling the start or end of a process, such as "submit inquiry" or "receive product".
  Process[15] Represents a set of operations that changes value, form, or location of data. Represented as a rectangle.[15]
  Decision[15] Shows a conditional operation that determines which one of the two paths the program will take.[14] The operation is commonly a yes/no question or true/false test. Represented as a diamond (rhombus).[15]
  Input/Output[15] Indicates the process of inputting and outputting data,[15] as in entering data or displaying results. Represented as a rhomboid.[14]
  Annotation[14] (Comment)[15] Indicating additional information about a step in the program. Represented as an open rectangle with a dashed or solid line connecting it to the corresponding symbol in the flowchart.[15]
  Predefined Process[14] Shows named process which is defined elsewhere. Represented as a rectangle with double-struck vertical edges.[14]
  On-page Connector[14] Pairs of labeled connectors replace long or confusing lines on a flowchart page. Represented by a small circle with a letter inside.[14][18]
  Off-page Connector[14] A labeled connector for use when the target is on another page. Represented as a home plate-shaped pentagon.[14][18]

Other symbols

The ANSI/ISO standards include symbols beyond the basic shapes. Some are:[17][18]

Shape Name Description
  Data File or Database Data represented by a cylinder symbolizing a disk drive.
  Document Single documents represented as a rectangle with a wavy base.
  Multiple documents represented as a stack of rectangles with wavy bases.
  Manual operation Represented by a trapezoid with the longest parallel side at the top, to represent an operation or adjustment to process that can only be made manually.
  Manual input Represented by quadrilateral, with the top irregularly sloping up from left to right, like the side view of a keyboard.
  Preparation or Initialization Represented by an elongated hexagon, originally used for steps like setting a switch or initializing a routine.

Parallel processing

  • Parallel Mode is represented by two horizontal lines at the beginning or ending of simultaneous operations[17]

For parallel and concurrent processing the Parallel Mode horizontal lines[19] or a horizontal bar[20] indicate the start or end of a section of processes that can be done independently:

  • At a fork, the process creates one or more additional processes, indicated by a bar with one incoming path and two or more outgoing paths.
  • At a join, two or more processes continue as a single process, indicated by a bar with several incoming paths and one outgoing path. All processes must complete before the single process continues.[20]

Software

Diagramming

 
Flowgorithm

Any drawing program can be used to create flowchart diagrams, but these will have no underlying data model to share data with databases or other programs such as project management systems or spreadsheet. Many software packages exist that can create flowcharts automatically, either directly from a programming language source code, or from a flowchart description language.

There are several applications and visual programming languages[21] that use flowcharts to represent and execute programs. Generally these are used as teaching tools for beginner students.

See also

References

  1. ^ SEVOCAB: Software Systems Engineering Vocabulary. Term: Flow chart. Retrieved 31 July 2008.
  2. ^ Frank Bunker Gilbreth, Lillian Moller Gilbreth (1921) (PDF). Archived from the original on 2015-05-09. Retrieved 2016-05-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link). American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
  3. ^ Graham, Ben S. Jr. (10 June 1996). "People come first". Keynote Address at Workflow Canada.
  4. ^ American Society of Mechanical Engineers (1947) ASME standard; operation and flow process charts. New York, 1947. (online version)
  5. ^ Hartree, Douglas (1949). Calculating Instruments and Machines. The University of Illinois Press. p. 112.
  6. ^ Bashe, Charles (1986). IBM's Early Computers. The MIT Press. p. 327. ISBN 9780262022255.
  7. ^ Goldstine, Herman (1972). The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann. Princeton University Press. pp. 266–267. ISBN 0-691-08104-2.
  8. ^ Taub, Abraham (1963). John von Neumann Collected Works. Vol. 5. Macmillan. pp. 80–151.
  9. ^ Bohl, Rynn: "Tools for Structured and Object-Oriented Design", Prentice Hall, 2007.
  10. ^ a b Alan B. Sterneckert (2003) Critical Incident Management. p. 126
  11. ^ Andrew Veronis (1978) Microprocessors: Design and Applications. p. 111
  12. ^ Marilyn Bohl (1978) A Guide for Programmers. p. 65.
  13. ^ Mark A. Fryman (2001) Quality and Process Improvement. p. 169.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gary B. Shelly; Misty E. Vermaat (2011). Discovering Computers, Complete: Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World. Cengage Learning. pp. 691–693. ISBN 978-1-111-53032-7.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Harley R. Myler (1998). "2.3 Flowcharts". Fundamentals of Engineering Programming with C and Fortran. Cambridge University Press. pp. 32–36. ISBN 978-0-521-62950-8.
  16. ^ "ISO 5807:1985". International Organization for Standardization. February 1985. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  17. ^ a b c Flowcharting Techniques GC20-8152-1. IBM. March 1970. p. 10.
  18. ^ a b c "What do the different flowchart shapes mean?". RFF Electronics. Retrieved 23 July 2017.
  19. ^ Jonathan W. Valvano (2011). Embedded Microcomputer Systems: Real Time Interfacing. Cengage Learning. pp. 131–132. ISBN 978-1-111-42625-5.
  20. ^ a b Robbie T. Nakatsu (2009). Reasoning with Diagrams: Decision-Making and Problem-Solving with Diagrams. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 68–69. ISBN 978-0-470-40072-2.
  21. ^ Myers, Brad A. "Visual programming, programming by example, and program visualization: a taxonomy." ACM SIGCHI Bulletin. Vol. 17. No. 4. ACM, 1986.

Further reading

  • ISO 5807 (1985). Information processing – Documentation symbols and conventions for data, program and system flowcharts, program network charts and system resources charts. International Organization for Standardization.
  • ISO 10628: Diagrams for the chemical and petrochemical industry
  • ECMA 4: Flowcharts (withdrawn – list of withdrawn standards)
  • Schultheiss, Louis A., and Edward M. Heiliger. "Techniques of flow-charting." (1963); with introduction by Edward Heiliger.

External links

  • : An IBM manual from 1969 (5 MB; PDF)

flowchart, flow, chart, redirects, here, poem, flow, chart, poem, music, group, band, flowchart, type, diagram, that, represents, workflow, process, flowchart, also, defined, diagrammatic, representation, algorithm, step, step, approach, solving, task, simple,. Flow chart redirects here For the poem see Flow Chart poem For the music group see Flowchart band A flowchart is a type of diagram that represents a workflow or process A flowchart can also be defined as a diagrammatic representation of an algorithm a step by step approach to solving a task A simple flowchart representing a process for dealing with a non functioning lamp The flowchart shows the steps as boxes of various kinds and their order by connecting the boxes with arrows This diagrammatic representation illustrates a solution model to a given problem Flowcharts are used in analyzing designing documenting or managing a process or program in various fields 1 Contents 1 Overview 2 History 3 Types 4 Building blocks 4 1 Common symbols 4 2 Other symbols 4 3 Parallel processing 5 Software 5 1 Diagramming 6 See also 6 1 Related diagrams 6 2 Related subjects 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksOverview Edit Flow diagram a C style for loop representing the following code for i 0 i lt 5 i printf The loop will cause five asterisks to be printed Flowcharts are used to design and document simple processes or programs Like other types of diagrams they help visualize the process Two of the many benefits are flaws and bottlenecks may become apparent Flowcharts typically use the following main symbols A process step usually called an activity is denoted as a rectangular box A decision is usually denoted as a diamond A flowchart is described as cross functional when the chart is divided into different vertical or horizontal parts to describe the control of different organizational units A symbol appearing in a particular part is within the control of that organizational unit A cross functional flowchart allows the author to correctly locate the responsibility for performing an action or making a decision and to show the responsibility of each organizational unit for different parts of a single process Flowcharts represent certain aspects of processes and are usually complemented by other types of diagram For instance Kaoru Ishikawa defined the flowchart as one of the seven basic tools of quality control next to the histogram Pareto chart check sheet control chart cause and effect diagram and the scatter diagram Similarly in UML a standard concept modeling notation used in software development the activity diagram which is a type of flowchart is just one of many different diagram types Nassi Shneiderman diagrams and Drakon charts are an alternative notation for process flow Common alternative names include flow chart process flowchart functional flowchart process map process chart functional process chart business process model process model process flow diagram work flow diagram business flow diagram The terms flowchart and flow chart are used interchangeably The underlying graph structure of a flowchart is a flow graph which abstracts away node types their contents and other ancillary information History EditThe first structured method for documenting process flow the flow process chart was introduced by Frank and Lillian Gilbreth in the presentation Process Charts First Steps in Finding the One Best Way to do Work to members of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers ASME in 1921 2 The Gilbreths tools quickly found their way into industrial engineering curricula In the early 1930s an industrial engineer Allan H Mogensen began to train business people in the use of some of the tools of industrial engineering at his Work Simplification Conferences in Lake Placid New York Art Spinanger a 1944 graduate of Mogensen s class took the tools back to Procter and Gamble where he developed their Deliberate Methods Change Program Ben S Graham another 1944 graduate Director of Formcraft Engineering at Standard Register Industrial applied the flow process chart to information processing with his development of the multi flow process chart to present multiple documents and their relationships 3 In 1947 ASME adopted a symbol set derived from Gilbreth s original work as the ASME Standard Operation and Flow Process Charts 4 Douglas Hartree in 1949 explained that Herman Goldstine and John von Neumann had developed a flowchart originally diagram to plan computer programs 5 His contemporary account was endorsed by IBM engineers 6 and by Goldstine s personal recollections 7 The original programming flowcharts of Goldstine and von Neumann can be found in their unpublished report Planning and coding of problems for an electronic computing instrument Part II Volume 1 1947 which is reproduced in von Neumann s collected works 8 The flowchart became a popular tool for describing computer algorithms but its popularity decreased in the 1970s when interactive computer terminals and third generation programming languages became common tools for computer programming since algorithms can be expressed more concisely as source code in such languages Often pseudo code is used which uses the common idioms of such languages without strictly adhering to the details of a particular one In the early 21st century flowcharts were still used for describing computer algorithms 9 Modern techniques such as UML activity diagrams and Drakon charts can be considered to be extensions of the flowchart Types EditSterneckert 2003 suggested that flowcharts can be modeled from the perspective of different user groups such as managers system analysts and clerks and that there are four general types 10 Document flowcharts showing controls over a document flow through a system Data flowcharts showing controls over a data flow in a system System flowcharts showing controls at a physical or resource level Program flowchart showing the controls in a program within a systemNotice that every type of flowchart focuses on some kind of control rather than on the particular flow itself 10 However there are some different classifications For example Andrew Veronis 1978 named three basic types of flowcharts the system flowchart the general flowchart and the detailed flowchart 11 That same year Marilyn Bohl 1978 stated in practice two kinds of flowcharts are used in solution planning system flowcharts and program flowcharts 12 More recently Mark A Fryman 2001 identified more differences Decision flowcharts logic flowcharts systems flowcharts product flowcharts and process flowcharts are just a few of the different types of flowcharts that are used in business and government 13 In addition many diagram techniques are similar to flowcharts but carry a different name such as UML activity diagrams Building blocks EditCommon symbols Edit The American National Standards Institute ANSI set standards for flowcharts and their symbols in the 1960s 14 The International Organization for Standardization ISO adopted the ANSI symbols in 1970 15 The current standard ISO 5807 was revised in 1985 16 Generally flowcharts flow from top to bottom and left to right 17 ANSI ISO Shape Name Description Flowline Arrowhead 15 Shows the process s order of operation A line coming from one symbol and pointing at another 14 Arrowheads are added if the flow is not the standard top to bottom left to right 15 Terminal 14 Indicates the beginning and ending of a program or sub process Represented as a stadium 14 oval or rounded fillet rectangle They usually contain the word Start or End or another phrase signaling the start or end of a process such as submit inquiry or receive product Process 15 Represents a set of operations that changes value form or location of data Represented as a rectangle 15 Decision 15 Shows a conditional operation that determines which one of the two paths the program will take 14 The operation is commonly a yes no question or true false test Represented as a diamond rhombus 15 Input Output 15 Indicates the process of inputting and outputting data 15 as in entering data or displaying results Represented as a rhomboid 14 Annotation 14 Comment 15 Indicating additional information about a step in the program Represented as an open rectangle with a dashed or solid line connecting it to the corresponding symbol in the flowchart 15 Predefined Process 14 Shows named process which is defined elsewhere Represented as a rectangle with double struck vertical edges 14 On page Connector 14 Pairs of labeled connectors replace long or confusing lines on a flowchart page Represented by a small circle with a letter inside 14 18 Off page Connector 14 A labeled connector for use when the target is on another page Represented as a home plate shaped pentagon 14 18 Other symbols Edit The ANSI ISO standards include symbols beyond the basic shapes Some are 17 18 Shape Name Description Data File or Database Data represented by a cylinder symbolizing a disk drive Document Single documents represented as a rectangle with a wavy base Multiple documents represented as a stack of rectangles with wavy bases Manual operation Represented by a trapezoid with the longest parallel side at the top to represent an operation or adjustment to process that can only be made manually Manual input Represented by quadrilateral with the top irregularly sloping up from left to right like the side view of a keyboard Preparation or Initialization Represented by an elongated hexagon originally used for steps like setting a switch or initializing a routine Parallel processing Edit Parallel Mode is represented by two horizontal lines at the beginning or ending of simultaneous operations 17 For parallel and concurrent processing the Parallel Mode horizontal lines 19 or a horizontal bar 20 indicate the start or end of a section of processes that can be done independently At a fork the process creates one or more additional processes indicated by a bar with one incoming path and two or more outgoing paths At a join two or more processes continue as a single process indicated by a bar with several incoming paths and one outgoing path All processes must complete before the single process continues 20 Software EditDiagramming Edit Flowgorithm Any drawing program can be used to create flowchart diagrams but these will have no underlying data model to share data with databases or other programs such as project management systems or spreadsheet Many software packages exist that can create flowcharts automatically either directly from a programming language source code or from a flowchart description language There are several applications and visual programming languages 21 that use flowcharts to represent and execute programs Generally these are used as teaching tools for beginner students See also EditRelated diagrams Edit Activity diagram Control flow diagram Control flow graph Data flow diagram Deployment flowchart Drakon chart Flow map Functional flow block diagram Nassi Shneiderman diagram State diagram Swimlane Warnier Orr diagram Why because analysis Related subjects Edit Augmented transition network Business process mapping Data and information visualization Interactive EasyFlow Process architecture Pseudocode Recursive transition network Unified Modeling Language UML WorkflowReferences Edit SEVOCAB Software Systems Engineering Vocabulary Term Flow chart Retrieved 31 July 2008 Frank Bunker Gilbreth Lillian Moller Gilbreth 1921 Process Charts PDF Archived from the original on 2015 05 09 Retrieved 2016 05 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link American Society of Mechanical Engineers Graham Ben S Jr 10 June 1996 People come first Keynote Address at Workflow Canada American Society of Mechanical Engineers 1947 ASME standard operation and flow process charts New York 1947 online version Hartree Douglas 1949 Calculating Instruments and Machines The University of Illinois Press p 112 Bashe Charles 1986 IBM s Early Computers The MIT Press p 327 ISBN 9780262022255 Goldstine Herman 1972 The Computer from Pascal to Von Neumann Princeton University Press pp 266 267 ISBN 0 691 08104 2 Taub Abraham 1963 John von Neumann Collected Works Vol 5 Macmillan pp 80 151 Bohl Rynn Tools for Structured and Object Oriented Design Prentice Hall 2007 a b Alan B Sterneckert 2003 Critical Incident Management p 126 Andrew Veronis 1978 Microprocessors Design and Applications p 111 Marilyn Bohl 1978 A Guide for Programmers p 65 Mark A Fryman 2001 Quality and Process Improvement p 169 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gary B Shelly Misty E Vermaat 2011 Discovering Computers Complete Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Cengage Learning pp 691 693 ISBN 978 1 111 53032 7 a b c d e f g h i j k Harley R Myler 1998 2 3 Flowcharts Fundamentals of Engineering Programming with C and Fortran Cambridge University Press pp 32 36 ISBN 978 0 521 62950 8 ISO 5807 1985 International Organization for Standardization February 1985 Retrieved 23 July 2017 a b c Flowcharting Techniques GC20 8152 1 IBM March 1970 p 10 a b c What do the different flowchart shapes mean RFF Electronics Retrieved 23 July 2017 Jonathan W Valvano 2011 Embedded Microcomputer Systems Real Time Interfacing Cengage Learning pp 131 132 ISBN 978 1 111 42625 5 a b Robbie T Nakatsu 2009 Reasoning with Diagrams Decision Making and Problem Solving with Diagrams John Wiley amp Sons pp 68 69 ISBN 978 0 470 40072 2 Myers Brad A Visual programming programming by example and program visualization a taxonomy ACM SIGCHI Bulletin Vol 17 No 4 ACM 1986 Further reading EditISO 5807 1985 Information processing Documentation symbols and conventions for data program and system flowcharts program network charts and system resources charts International Organization for Standardization ISO 10628 Diagrams for the chemical and petrochemical industry ECMA 4 Flowcharts withdrawn list of withdrawn standards Schultheiss Louis A and Edward M Heiliger Techniques of flow charting 1963 with introduction by Edward Heiliger External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Flow chart Flowcharting Techniques An IBM manual from 1969 5 MB PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flowchart amp oldid 1144718938, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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