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Reviews : Logic Explorers CodeLogic for Java 1.5 :

Review: Logic Explorers CodeLogic for Java 1.5

by Drew Falkman

Summary

Nothing can save development time like good documentation. Understanding the big picture allows developers to go deeper faster. This is especially true when getting back into an application after a few months or starting a new job and diving head first into a complex Java application. The people at Logic Explorers are trying to make this easier for you. CodeLogic 1.5 will allow developers to dynamically generate documentation on the fly - in Unified Modeling Language (UML) flow, sequence and class diagrams.

More Information

Introduction

Code evolves. Not on it's own, of course, but with your help. OK, so maybe more than your help, maybe you do it all. But the point remains that what we initially plan on building ends up being something quite different--if not by the time the project's over, surely a year or two down the road. Now imagine that you get hired to jump in and start cranking on an application that someone else has evolved or you haven't worked on in a good number of months. Wouldn't it be nice to have some documentation? Well don't bother looking up the planning docs that are on file from this application because this app has evolved. This is where CodeLogic comes in.

Just point it to your Java application/project and CodeLogic will go through the .java source files and generate your documentation. From the developer's perspective no complicated configuration or real work is necessary; CodeLogic does the work for you. You can then either browse through these diagrams in CodeLogic or you can export them in a number of formats.

While I think this is overall a good tool to have in the arsenal, I have to warn: this is a simple tool in an early version by a small company. The documentation is sparse, though admittedly the application is easy enough to use that not much documentation is necessary(provided you have an understanding of UML diagrams).

Getting Started and Using CodeLogic

From what I could tell, CodeLogic is currently available only for Windows 2000, XP and ME. CodeLogic will integrate with a number of Java IDEs: Eclipse, Borland JBuilder, Oracle JDeveloper, and JetBrains IntelliJ IDEA and of course the standalone application. Setup is a breeze, CodeLogic selects a JVM automatically, you select an install directory and which IDE plug-ins to install.

Using the Standalone

In order to use the standalone application, you first need to point CodeLogic to your application/project. You do this by pointing to a single .java source file in the application. Afterwards, CodeLogic will give you a number of folder options. Important note: make sure all of your project files are in a centralized directory or they will not be parsed.

Using the Plug-in

Using the plug-in is a somewhat different process than using the standalone application. I tested this using Eclipse. I found the plug-in most useful on a class-by-class basis. For example, I could right-click on a .java file in Eclipse and select the "Switch to CodeLogic" option. This would parse the file and open the resulting CodeLogic diagrams in a new Java window. I could see this being quite useful to a developer who just needs to quickly get a picture of what is going on inside of a Java class before he/she dives in and starts making changes.

That said, I would be remiss in not mentioning that I observed some odd behavior in the plug-in functionality. The trial version limits actions and this could simply be a result of that, but parsing an entire project resulted in at first nothing, then on reloading the plug-in it generated diagrams for one class in the project seemingly at random. Hopefully this is an isolated incident, but I recommend testing in your environment with your IDE before purchasing.

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