A flowchart (also spelled flow-chart and flow chart) is a schematic representation of a process. They are commonly used in business/economic presentations to help the audience visualize the content better, or to find flaws in the process.
The flowchart is one of the seven basic tools of quality control, which include the histogram, Pareto chart, check sheet, control chart, cause-and-effect diagram, flowchart, and scatter diagram. See Quality Management Glossary.
Examples include instructions for a bicycle's assembly, an attorney outlining a case's timeline, diagram of an automobile plant's work flow, the decisions to be taken on a tax form, et cetera.
Generally the start point, end points, inputs, outputs, possible paths and the decisions that lead to these possible paths are included.
Flow-charts can be created by hand or manually in most office software, but lately specialized diagram drawing software has emerged that can also be used for the purpose, such as Visio, OpenOffice.org Draw, ConceptDraw, Dia, SmartDraw, and OmniGraffle.
Programs have been written to create flowcharts directly from computer program source.
Flowcharts may contain other symbols, such as connectors, usually represented as circles, to represent converging paths in the flow chart. Circles will have more than one arrow coming into them but only one going out. Some flow charts may just have an arrow point to another arrow instead. These are useful to represent an iterative process (what in Computer Science is called a loop). A loop may, for example, consist of a connector where control first enters, processing steps, a conditional with one arrow exiting the loop, and one going back to the connector.
When in Microsoft Word, enable the Drawing toolbar and click Autoshapes then Flowcharts and finally on the appropriate shape you would like. Right-click on a shape and then click Add Text to do so. The Arrow or Line tool is used to manually draw links. The connectors are not available in Word 97 - so lines will not remain connected to objects if they are moved.
You can also create Flowcharts directly in Excel (useful for printing in large papers) and in Powerpoint (useful for presentations). The functions in these programs are much the same as the Word functions.
When in OpenOffice.org, enable the Drawing toolbar which has a flow-out menu for Flowcharts since version 2.0, which can do roughly the same as Word.
When in OpenOffice.org Draw, enable the Flowchart palette and click a shape to add it in. Double-clicking a shape will add text to it within appropriate boundaries. Connections can be automatically made between shapes using Connectors and Glue Points - click on the Connector arrow to see a selection of them before dragging from a Glue Point on a shape to another. Draw will maintain the link and automatically redraw the connector if you resize or move any shape.
Creating flowcharts can also be done with Microsoft Visio, part of the Microsoft Office Suite of applications.
Algorithms | Software design patterns | Quality control tools | Diagrams | Technical communication
Programmablaufplan | Διάγραμμα ροής | Diagrama de flujo | Diagramma a blocchi | תרשים זרימה | Stroomdiagram | フローチャート | Schemat blokowy | Fluxograma | Diagram poteka
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