Abstract

Software developers often meet the problem of creating new components of an application that someone probably has already produced. Without having effective reuse tools usually it is more natural to create new components from scratch than to seek for useful elements in other programmes and/or systems.In the field of simulation of Flexible Manufacturing Systems (FMS) this issue often occurs, when different systems with some similar features have to be managed. FMSs are highly automated production systems with minimal human control. FMS usually consist Flexible Manufacturing Cells (FMCs). An FMC is considered as a group of one or more machine tools, robots, adjacent mechanical elements, tool and fixture supporting workstations and an internal transport system.The components of different FMSs and FMCs are the same type of machine tools, transfer equipment, etc. In the relevant aspects they usually differ from each other only in their amounts and working parameters. This fact itself breeds the idea of reuse of FMS and FMC simulation model elements.Simulation can be used for analysing the behaviour of an existing or would-be system. It is useful for calculating utilisation statistics, finding bottlenecks, pointing out scheduling errors, and even for creating manufacturing schedules. Simulation is a very effective technique for dynamic analysis, but it is short of optimising ability. A satisfactory solution can be obtained through modelling and simulating alternative approaches with iteration.There are many concepts, object classes, and lines of source code created, that could be reused in the new applications. Usage of reuse methodology and practice will reduce our efforts in developing new systems.In this paper the reuse of the components of simulation models in a hybrid simulation and scheduling system for new simulation applications will be introduced. This simulation-scheduler system has been implemented as a combination of a traditional simulation language (SIMAN/Cinema) and an intelligent expert environment (G2). The design methodology used for model development is based on the object-oriented Rational Rose CASE tool and on a use-case model.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call