Cartlanna míosúla: Feabhra 2008

Réiteach (saghas): Socraigh Tosaíocht ar Tasc Ag baint úsáide as SharePoint Dearthóir

Tá mé cás gnó mar seo:

  • A uaslódála úsáideora doiciméad leabharlann doiciméad.
  • Roghnaíonn sí cineál inneachair agus a thiocfaidh sonraí meta mar is gá. Is é ceann de na réimsí sonraí meta bratach, "Urgent".
  • Triggers seo sreabhadh oibre Dearthóir SharePoint go, i measc nithe eile, uses the "Collect Data from a User" gníomh.

"Collect Data from a User" Cruthaíonn mír i dtasc liosta cheadú iarraidh don cháipéis.

Is gá dom a chruthú d'fhonn an liosta tasc a léirigh iarratais phráinneacha le faomhadh.

Réiteach: Put the word "URGENT:" into the title of these tasks.

I would have preferred to specify the priority field directly. Mar sin féin, Raibh mé in ann é sin a dhéanamh ar chúiseanna éagsúla:

  1. Ní dhéanann an gníomh a bhailiú sonraí a sholáthróidh meicníocht le nuashonrú ar bith eile seachas an réimse teideal (agus iad siúd réimsí breise a ba mhaith leat chun sonraí a bhailiú).
  2. The "assign a to do item" Tá an fhadhb chéanna gníomh.
  3. Tá sé is féidir a chur isteach le mír i liosta (i.e. cuir mír isteach ar an liosta tasc díreach) but this not a blocking action. That means that the workflow will not wait for the user to complete that task.

Mheas mé cúpla cur chuige roimh (buíochas le Dia) realizing we could just put "urgent" sa teideal.

  1. Tosaigh le sreabhadh oibre ar an liosta tasc féin ionas gur nuair atá tasc nua a cruthaíodh, sé trasna ar bhealach tagairtí ar ais chun an doiciméad a thosaigh an chéad sreabhadh oibre, pull out the urgent flag value and update priority as needed.
  2. Do something similar with an event receiver. On create of the task, an doiciméid ghaolmhara a aimsiú agus a thabhairt cothrom le dáta tosaíocht mar is gá.
  3. Use the "create list item" action in conjunction with the "wait for field change" action and an event receiver. If we create a list item, we can specify all the fields we want. Use an event receiver to update the original item when the user completes the task and the "wait for field change" action’s condition would be met and the workflow would proceed. (Ar chúis éigin, Bhí mé níos mó nó níos lú a shocrú ar an gcur chuige seo sula gcinnfidh sé críonna chun siúl amach ar feadh tamaill).

Tá míbhuntáiste le mo réiteach (ar leataobh as an bhfíric go léir iúl ach amháin an téacs an teideal práinne). Since "collect feedback" ach glacann ainmneacha teideal códaithe crua, I need to use two different collect feedback actions whose only difference is that hard coded title.

Ach, ar a laghad, níl a réiteach nach gá glacadóirí imeacht nó gníomhartha SPD saincheaptha.

Má tá duine éigin réiteach seo ar bhealach níos cliste, cuir in iúl dom.

</deireadh>

Dé Domhnaigh greannmhar: Coimeád Do Son Ar a Toes

One of the many joys I take in being the parent of a ten year old boy is finding new ways to make him laugh or think a little differently about questions and things in the world. I’ve used these techniques over the years:

===

Misconstrue chuid ceisteanna:

A: Cén lá é?

Daid: Lá amháin roimh Dé Céadaoin.

S: Ní, Cén lá den mhí go bhfuil sé?

D: Ó, tá sé 4 lá tar éis Jan 25.

===

Tickle dó agus a insint dó go mbainfidh tú stop a chur nuair a stopann sé ag gáire.

===

Téigh síos staighre go dtí an seomra teilifíse agus a fhógairt, "It’s good to be the daddy." Ansin,, phiocadh suas dó a fháil ar an láthair te ar an tolg agus an cainéal athrú go rud maith, cosúil leis an cainéal scifi.

===

Read stories out loud. Insert ridiculous sentences in the middle of the story. My favorite is to add "killing him instantly" when the main characters encounters some minor trouble. Mar shampla, "the knife slipped in his hand, gearradh a mhéar innéacs, marú dó láithreach." Nothing quite gets your son out of a complacent and passive listening mode as the main character being killed instantly.

===

Read stories incorrectly. Read sentences backward. The best part of this is that the first couple of times I did this, my son thought he was helping me out by pointing out that I wasn’t reading the words in the right order. The down side is that he really doesn’t want me to read to him any more.

===

Go to Burger King for lunch. My son would eat BK morning, night and day if we let him. When going, insint dó, "I know you hate going there, but we simply have no choice." When he tries to explain that he loves BK, talk over him and say things like "We don’t have time to argue about it! We’re going and I don’t want to have a discussion!"

(Seo i gcuimhne dom ar mo Borg joke is fearr leat: "Borger King: We do it our way. Your way is irrelevant." hahaha!)

===

Leabhar Oscailte do leathanach 9 agus a rá, "hmm, that’s an odd page".

===

Fill the world with arch enemies. "We’re going to run quick over toe 7-11, arch-enemy of 11-7".

"Your aunt lives in Ringwood, namhaid áirse go dtí an baile na Squarewood."

===

Tiomáint muid suas go dtí Massachusetts, ón New Jersey cúpla uair sa bhliain agus a thógann sé go minic faoi 5 hours door to door. As we arrive home and pull into the driveway say, "oh, Rinne mé dearmad, ní mór dúinn a dhéanamh Fleasc mear Baile Depot."

===

Nuair a breathnú ar eipeasóid foréigneach i seó teilifíse (mar shampla Heroes), insint do mhac, "some times, ag an obair, I need to destroy my enemies by burning them alive using the powers of my mind. I don’t like doing it, ach gotta leat a dhéanamh cad gotta leat a dhéanamh."

===

Nuair a breathnú ar scannáin horror dona (see "It’s good to be the Daddy" thuas), ascribe improbable motives to the evil character. Mar shampla, tell your son that the reason Jason is so angry is because he wants some cake and they won’t let him have any.

===

Explain phone numbers incorrectly. Instead of telling your son to dial "201-111-2222", tell him it’s "2-011-1-12222".

===

Cad iad na cleasanna a úsáideann tú?

</deireadh>

Clibeanna Technorati:

Aoi Blagadóireacht?

It seems fairly common in the political blogging world for a given blog to host a "guest blogger". When I’m in political blog land I must be wearing a different pair of eye glasses because it never occurred to me that "guest blogging" might make sense for a technical blog like mine. That is, until I read this post by Kanwal Khipple over at The Best of SharePoint Buzz- Eanáir 2008.

Thinking on it, I believe there could be a lot of people out there in SharePoint land that have the itch to put together an article, short or long, technical or more business oriented, etc, but don’t run their own blog for all the usual reasons. If you’re one of those people, I’d be happy to host it. You can reach me via email or leave a comment. I haven’t thought through any kind of guidelines, but I suppose that I’d want it to be oriented around SharePoint, but I also like to throw in some personal observations about consulting now agus ansin. I’m also trying to publish a "Dé Domhnaigh greannmhar" every week and I’m bound to run out of ideas for that.

If you’re a regular blogger already but would like to experiment with guest blogging, I’m definitely open to that too, either as a host or a guest 🙂

</deireadh>

Clibeanna Technorati: