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The book is quite OK and shows lots of small examples to get acquainted with the BPMN notation. It is It start with a level 1 view on processes where a subset of the BPMN notation is used. Next it dives deeper with many more symbols (Level 2). One unique view expressed in the book is that the BPM models can be implemented with a BPM(N) workflow engine (level 3a), but also translated into an IT specification (level 3b) and implemented in code (level 4b).
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Towards the end, both books well explain that BPMN 2 is not only a graphical representation but also an XML representation. Funny to see how Bruce Silver refers to BPMN XML examples from Camunda. The circle was round.
Author: Guy
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