removeProfile
Description
removeProfile(
removes the profile from a model.model
,profileName
)
Examples
Remove Profile
Create a model.
model = systemcomposer.createModel("archModel",true);
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");
Remove the profile from the model.
model.removeProfile("LatencyProfile");
Input Arguments
model
— Architecture model
model object
Architecture model, specified as a systemcomposer.arch.Model
object.
profileName
— Name of profile
character vector | string
Name of profile, specified as a character vector or string.
Example: "SystemProfile"
Data Types: char
| string
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. | |
model | A System Composer model is the file that contains architectural information, including 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 nontrivial, nearly independent, and 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, a 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:
| Components |
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. |
There are different types of ports:
| Ports |
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. | Connections |
Term | Definition | Application | More Information |
---|---|---|---|
stereotype | A stereotype is a custom extension of the modeling language. Stereotypes provide a mechanism to extend the architecture language elements by adding domain-specific metadata. | Apply stereotypes to model elements such as root-level architecture, component architecture, connectors, ports, data interfaces, value types, functions, requirements, and links. Functions only apply to software architectures. You must have a Requirements Toolbox™ license to apply stereotypes to requirements and links. A model element can have multiple stereotypes. Stereotypes provide model elements with a common set of property fields, such as mass, cost, and power. | Extend Architectural Design Using Stereotypes |
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. | |
profile | A profile is a package of stereotypes that you can use to create a self-consistent domain of 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. |
Version History
Introduced in R2019a
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