Timer Intermediate Events are triggered by a defined timer. You can use the timer intermediate event in the Designer as boundary event and as intermediate event:
Boundary: The timer is attached to an activity and works as a stopwatch and an alarm clock. When the execution reaches the activity, the timer is started. When the timer fires, for example after a defined interval, the activity is interrupted and the sequence flow exiting the timer is followed.
Intermediate: You can also use the object as an intermediate catching event. In this case, the event is a separate process step. When the execution arrives at the event, a timer is started. When the timer fires, the sequence flow exiting the timer is followed.
To set the duration of the timer, the event should be trigged by a persisted property of type integer or datetime. You have two options to set the timeout in the attributes panel:
Integer: Define the number of seconds the event has to wait.
Datetime: Define the absolute datetime when the event should fire.
To set the duration of the timer, the event should be trigged by a persisted property of type integer or datetime.
You have two options to set the timeout in the Attributes Panel:
Integer: Define the number of seconds the event has to wait.
Datetime: Define the absolute datetime when the event should fire.
Execution
On Event: Without input or output parameters.
Editing and Styling
Refer to Working with the BPMN Editor for further information regarding editing of BPMN elements using the different context menus on the diagram pane.
Refer to Styling BPMN Elements for further information regarding styling possibilities for BPMN elements, for example how to change the background color, the font style and size etc.
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