Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 2, 2026

General-purpose modeling

General-purpose modeling (GPM) is the systematic use of a general-purpose modeling language to represent the various facets of an object or a system. Examples of GPM languages are:The Unified Modeling Language (UML), an industry standard for modeling software-intensive systems EXPRESS, a data modeling language for product data, standardized as ISO 10303-11 IDEF, a group of languages from the 1970s that aimed to be neutral, generic and reusable Gellish, an industry standard natural language oriented modeling language for storage and exchange of data and knowledge, published in 2005 XML, a data modeling language now beginning to be used to model code

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General-purpose modeling (GPM) is the systematic use of a general-purpose modeling language to represent the various facets of an object or a system. Examples of GPM languages are:

  • The Unified Modeling Language (UML), an industry standard for modeling software-intensive systems
  • EXPRESS, a data modeling language for product data, standardized as ISO 10303-11
  • IDEF, a group of languages from the 1970s that aimed to be neutral, generic and reusable1
  • Gellish, an industry standard natural language oriented modeling language for storage and exchange of data and knowledge, published in 2005
  • XML, a data modeling language now beginning to be used to model code (MetaL, Microsoft .Net [1])

GPM languages are in contrast with domain-specific modeling languages (DSMs).

See also

See also

References

References