Checklist: Use Case
This checklist helps make sure that all use cases are described and structured correctly.
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Expand Is each concrete use case involved with at least one actor  
If not, something is wrong; a use case that does not interact with an actor is superfluous, and you should remove it. For more information, see Guideline: Use Case.
Expand Is each use case independent of the others  
If two use cases are always activated in the same sequence, you should probably merge them into one use case.
Expand For an included use case  
does it make assumptions about the use cases that include it? Such assumptions should be avoided, so that the included use case is not affected by changes to the including use cases.
Expand Do any use cases have very similar behaviors or flows of events  
If so - and if you wish their behavior to be similar in the future - you should merge them into a single use case. This makes it easier to introduce future changes. Note: you must involve the users if you decide to merge use cases, because the users, who interact with the new, merged use case will probably be affected.
Expand Has part of the flow of events already been modeled as another use case  
If so, you can have the new use case use the old one.
Expand Is some part of the flow of events already part of another use case  
If so, you should extract this subflow and have it be used by the use cases in question. Note: you must involve the users if you decide to "reuse" the subflow, because the users of the existing use case will probably be affected.
Expand Should the flow of events of one use case be inserted into the flow of events of another  
If so, you model this with an extend-relationship to the other use case.
Expand Do the use cases have unique, intuitive, and explanatory names so that they cannot be mixed up at a later stage  
If not, you change their names.
Expand Do customers and users alike understand the names and descriptions of the use cases  
Each use-case name must describe the behavior the use case supports.
Expand Does the use case meet all the requirements that obviously govern its performance  
You must include any (nonfunctional) requirements to be handled in the object models in the use-case Special Requirements.
Does the communication sequence between actor and use case conform to the user's expectations  
Is it clear how and when the use case's flow of events starts and ends  
Expand Behavior might exist that is activated only when a certain condition is not met  
Is there a description of what will happen if a given condition is not met?
Expand Are any use cases overly complex  
If you want your use-case model to be easy to understand, you might have to split up complex use cases.
Expand Does a use case contain disparate flows of events  
If so, it is best to divide it into two or more separate use cases. A use case that contains disparate flows of events will be very difficult to understand and to maintain.
Is the subflow in a use case modeled accurately  
Expand Is it clear who wishes to perform a use case  
Is the purpose of the use case also clear?
Are the actor interactions and exchanged information clear  
Does the brief description give a true picture of the use case