Saturday, February 4, 2012

[vacancy] Vacancy: Engineer

 

PT. SOLUSI INDOSISTEM OTOMAT founded in 1999, started with services business in the field of automations which concentrate in services, design engineering and software development to commissioning start up work for various vendor; in the next following year the company take the share market in panel builder as customer requisition get from single source multi-vendor as well as company development by spread the wing into energy sector.
 
Nowadays, PT. Solusi Indosistem Otomat or well-known as "C-SAT System" becomes system integrator company in the field of Automation Technology and Energy Automation
 
In advancing our business, we are currently seeking candidates to join as :
 
ELECTRICAL ENGINEER (FRESH GRADUATE)
Perform design, configuration and implementation of process control solutions and Power Transmission & Distribution which include documentation, detailed design generation, programming, implementation, system integration, testing and on-site start-up.

GENERAL REQUIREMENTS :
  • Minimum D-3 majoring in Electrical  Engineering
  • High analytical thinking,  energetic and resourceful person with excellent interpersonal skills
  • Knowledge of electrical systems and PLC's would also be useful, along with a working experience of CAD
  • Good communication in English and reading
  • Willing to learn for various vendor application package
  • Self motivated and able to work independently
  • Ability to work as a good team player or individually and willing to work under pressure
HOW TO APPLY :
Submit your full resume attached with supporting document  to: services@csat-system.com  or by962000@yahoo.com

To explore and get more information about our company, check our website www.csat-system.com  

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
____
40000+ members and counting.
No Spam. No Ads. No Bull. Just plain job posts.
Join us, send a blank e-mail to: vacancy-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
For jobs in India, send e-mail to: vacancy-india-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

===================
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__,_._,___

[vacancy] Vacancy: Engineer

 

PT.SOLUSI INDOSISTEM OTOMAT foundedin 1999, started with services business in the field of automations whichconcentrate in services, design engineering and software development tocommissioning start up work for various vendor; in the next following year thecompany take the share market in panel builder as customer requisition get fromsingle source multi-vendor as well as company development by spread the winginto energy sector.

Nowadays, PT. Solusi Indosistem Otomat orwell-known as "C-SAT System" becomes system integrator company in the field ofAutomation Technology and Energy Automation

In advancing our business, we arecurrently seeking candidates to join as :

ELECTRICAL ENGINEER (FRESH GRADUATE)

Perform design, configuration and implementation ofprocess control solutions and Power Transmission & Distribution whichinclude documentation, detailed design generation, programming, implementation,system integration, testing and on-site start-up.

GENERALREQUIREMENTS :

  • Minimum D-3 majoring in Electrical  Engineering
  • High analytical thinking,  energetic and resourceful person with excellent interpersonal skills
  • Knowledge of electrical systems and PLC's would also be useful, along with a working experience of CAD
  • Good communication in English and reading
  • Willing to learn for various vendor application package
  • Self motivated and able to work independently
  • Ability to work as a good team player or individually and willing to work under pressure

HOW TO APPLY : 

Submit your full resume attached with supporting document  to: 

services@csat-system.com or by962000@yahoo.com

To explore andget more information about our company, check our website www.csat-system.com  

__._,_.___
Recent Activity:
____
40000+ members and counting.
No Spam. No Ads. No Bull. Just plain job posts.
Join us, send a blank e-mail to: vacancy-subscribe@yahoogroups.com
For jobs in India, send e-mail to: vacancy-india-subscribe@yahoogroups.com

===================
.

__,_._,___

Ibadah bersama Pdt.Petrus Agung Purnomo di Jakarta tanggal 6-8 February 2012

Saudara kekasih,

Be strong in HIS grace !! (Jadilah kuat dalam anugerahNya !!) 
Itulah tema kita di SHRK bulan February, tanggal 6-8 nanti, jam 18 WIB. 
Bertempat di Balai Samudera, Kompleks InKopAL Kelapa Gading - Jakarta Utara. Lokasi gedung tepat berada di seberang Mall of Indonesia (MoI).
Ternyata anugerah merupakan senjata yang dahsyat. Dan Tuhan mau semua kita hidup dan bergerak dalam anugerahNya yang mentakjubkan. 
Siapkan hatimu supaya kebenaranNya membawa terobosan dalam hidup kita. 
See you soon. 

By His grace,
Pdt.Petrus Agung Purnomo

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Email : 
shrkjkt@yahoo.com 
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SHRK berikutnya : 
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Bagi anda yang berminat untuk membeli atau menerima update terbaru berbagai macam products VCD, DVD, buku, dan merchandise items dari Media Injil Kerajaan Semarang bisa bergabung melalui blackberry dengan pin 2830481D.

[sharepointdiscussions] Digest Number 4388

Messages In This Digest (10 Messages)

Messages

1a.

Re: Querystring Variable in List View?

Posted by: "Roger" frontierrog@yahoo.com   frontierrog

Fri Feb 3, 2012 4:15 am (PST)



Yeah, that was my thought. But my Google searches keep pointing to SPD though. Time to break out the SP Object Model poster!

________________________________
From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com>
To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, February 2, 2012 11:11 PM
Subject: Re: [sharepointdiscussions] Querystring Variable in List View?


 
Oh. Well, I've never tried to filter a list view in Visual Studio, but if
you can do it in SPD, I'm pretty sure there's a way to do it in VS.NET.

On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 9:32 PM, Roger <frontierrog@yahoo.com> wrote:

> No, doing this in Visual Studio.
>
> --- On Thu, 2/2/12, Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com>
>
> Are you using Designer for this? You can create a parameter that
> gets its
>
> value from the querystring param and then filter your XSLT data view based
>
> on that.
>
>
>
> There's more flexibility in the SPD approach, but if you need to go with
>
> out-of-the-box components, you should be able to use a querystring filter
>
> web part and connect it to the list view web part.
>
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 3:48 PM, <frontierrog@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> > In SP2007, I am trying to use a querystring variable in a list view. Is
> it
>
> > possible to do this? In the UI or code? As an example, what I am trying
> to
>
> > do is display all invoices for a certain customer in a view. How can I
>
> > accomplish that?
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

1b.

Re: Querystring Variable in List View?

Posted by: "frontierrog@yahoo.com" frontierrog@yahoo.com   frontierrog

Fri Feb 3, 2012 7:53 am (PST)



I don't find anything on the SP Object Model poster about filters for a view.

--- In sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com, Roger <frontierrog@...> wrote:
>
> Yeah, that was my thought. But my Google searches keep pointing to SPD though. Time to break out the SP Object Model poster!
>
>
>
> ________________________________
> From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@...>
> To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
> Sent: Thursday, February 2, 2012 11:11 PM
> Subject: Re: [sharepointdiscussions] Querystring Variable in List View?
>
>
>  
> Oh. Well, I've never tried to filter a list view in Visual Studio, but if
> you can do it in SPD, I'm pretty sure there's a way to do it in VS.NET.
>
> On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 9:32 PM, Roger <frontierrog@...> wrote:
>
> > No, doing this in Visual Studio.
> >
> > --- On Thu, 2/2/12, Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@...> wrote:
> >
> > From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@...>
> >
> > Are you using Designer for this? You can create a parameter that
> > gets its
> >
> > value from the querystring param and then filter your XSLT data view based
> >
> > on that.
> >
> >
> >
> > There's more flexibility in the SPD approach, but if you need to go with
> >
> > out-of-the-box components, you should be able to use a querystring filter
> >
> > web part and connect it to the list view web part.
> >
> >
> >
> > On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 3:48 PM, <frontierrog@...> wrote:
> >
> >
> >
> > > In SP2007, I am trying to use a querystring variable in a list view. Is
> > it
> >
> > > possible to do this? In the UI or code? As an example, what I am trying
> > to
> >
> > > do is display all invoices for a certain customer in a view. How can I
> >
> > > accomplish that?
> >
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

1c.

Re: Querystring Variable in List View?

Posted by: "Peter Brunone" peter.brunone@gmail.com   peter_brunone

Fri Feb 3, 2012 8:27 am (PST)



The ListViewWebPart (which you are most likely using to display the view)
has a FilterString property. The format appears to be

myListViewWebPart.FilterString = "FilterField1=ID&FilterValue1=557"

(there seems to be some debate about whether that syntax works, so you
might try FilterField and ValueField without the 1)

If that doesn't work for you, then you can jack in at the SPView level and
change its Query property. This involves writing a little bit of CAML, but
it's really not that bad once you get your head around it.

Cheers,

Peter

On Fri, Feb 3, 2012 at 9:53 AM, <frontierrog@yahoo.com> wrote:

> I don't find anything on the SP Object Model poster about filters for a
> view.
>
> --- In sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com, Roger <frontierrog@...>
> wrote:
> >
> > Yeah, that was my thought. But my Google searches keep pointing to SPD
> though. Time to break out the SP Object Model poster!
> >
> >
> >
> > ________________________________
> > From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@...>
> > To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
> > Sent: Thursday, February 2, 2012 11:11 PM
> > Subject: Re: [sharepointdiscussions] Querystring Variable in List View?
> >
> >
> > Â
> > Oh. Well, I've never tried to filter a list view in Visual Studio, but
> if
> > you can do it in SPD, I'm pretty sure there's a way to do it in VS.NET.
> >
> > On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 9:32 PM, Roger <frontierrog@...> wrote:
> >
> > > No, doing this in Visual Studio.
> > >
> > > --- On Thu, 2/2/12, Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@...> wrote:
> > >
> > > From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@...>
> > >
> > > Are you using Designer for this? You can create a parameter that
> > > gets its
> > >
> > > value from the querystring param and then filter your XSLT data view
> based
> > >
> > > on that.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > There's more flexibility in the SPD approach, but if you need to go
> with
> > >
> > > out-of-the-box components, you should be able to use a querystring
> filter
> > >
> > > web part and connect it to the list view web part.
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 3:48 PM, <frontierrog@...> wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > > In SP2007, I am trying to use a querystring variable in a list view.
> Is
> > > it
> > >
> > > > possible to do this? In the UI or code? As an example, what I am
> trying
> > > to
> > >
> > > > do is display all invoices for a certain customer in a view. How can
> I
> > >
> > > > accomplish that?
> > >
> >
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> >
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

1d.

Re: Querystring Variable in List View?

Posted by: "Bilal" mailtobilalahmad@yahoo.com   mailtobilalahmad

Fri Feb 3, 2012 8:42 am (PST)





You can accomplish this by using a query string filter web part and connections. Slightly tricky but doable.

------------------------------
On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 11:11 PM EST Peter Brunone wrote:

>Oh. Well, I've never tried to filter a list view in Visual Studio, but if
>you can do it in SPD, I'm pretty sure there's a way to do it in VS.NET.
>
>On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 9:32 PM, Roger <frontierrog@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
>> No, doing this in Visual Studio.
>>
>> --- On Thu, 2/2/12, Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com> wrote:
>>
>> From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com>
>>
>> Are you using Designer for this? You can create a parameter that
>> gets its
>>
>> value from the querystring param and then filter your XSLT data view based
>>
>> on that.
>>
>>
>>
>> There's more flexibility in the SPD approach, but if you need to go with
>>
>> out-of-the-box components, you should be able to use a querystring filter
>>
>> web part and connect it to the list view web part.
>>
>>
>>
>> On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 3:48 PM, <frontierrog@yahoo.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> > In SP2007, I am trying to use a querystring variable in a list view. Is
>> it
>>
>> > possible to do this? In the UI or code? As an example, what I am trying
>> to
>>
>> > do is display all invoices for a certain customer in a view. How can I
>>
>> > accomplish that?
>>
>
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

1e.

Re: Querystring Variable in List View?

Posted by: "Shane Gibson" shane.gibson.lsg@gmail.com   shane_gibson_lsg

Fri Feb 3, 2012 8:43 am (PST)



Here is some object model code that may help you but it is not using SharePoint per say (running on a separate web page using the SP Master page to look like it's part of the site):

<%@ Assembly Name="Microsoft.SharePoint, Version=12.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=71e9bce111e9429c"%>

<%@ Page Language="C#" MasterPageFile="~/_layouts/application.master"

Inherits="Microsoft.SharePoint.WebControls.LayoutsPageBase" %>

<%@ Import Namespace="Microsoft.SharePoint" %>

<%@ Import Namespace="Microsoft.SharePoint.WebControls" %>

<script runat="server">

protected int EmpIdNum = 0;

protected int ManagerIdNum = 0;

protected string Manager_Email = "";

protected string First_Name = "";

protected string MI = "";

protected string Last_Name = "";

protected string Email = "";

protected string Job_Title = "";

private void GetListItemByEmail()

{

SPSite site = this.Site;

SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb();

SPList list = web.Lists["User_Information"];

SPListItemCollection items = list.Items;

int userfoundcount = 0;

foreach (SPListItem item in items)

{

if (item["Email"].ToString().ToLower() == Email.ToLower())

{

object listItemEmailFieldValue = item["Email"];

object listItemTitleFieldValue = item["Title"];

object listItemManager_Id_Number_FieldValue = item["Manager_Id_Number"];

object listItemFirst_NameFieldValue = item["First_Name"];

object listItemMIFieldValue = item["MI"];

object listItemLast_NameFieldValue = item["Last_Name"];

object listItemJob_TitleFieldValue = item["Job_Title"];

if (listItemEmailFieldValue != null)

{ lblInfo.Text = item["Email"].ToString(); }

if (listItemTitleFieldValue != null)

{ EmpIdNum = Convert.ToInt32(item["Title"].ToString()); }

if (listItemManager_Id_Number_FieldValue != null)

{ ManagerIdNum = Convert.ToInt32(item["Manager_Id_Number"].ToString()); }

if (listItemFirst_NameFieldValue != null)

{ First_Name = item["First_Name"].ToString(); }

if (listItemMIFieldValue != null)

{ MI = item["MI"].ToString(); }

if (listItemLast_NameFieldValue != null)

{ Last_Name = item["Last_Name"].ToString(); }

if (listItemEmailFieldValue != null)

{ Email = item["Email"].ToString(); }

if (listItemJob_TitleFieldValue != null)

{ Job_Title = item["Job_Title"].ToString(); }

//if (item[""].ToString() != null)

//{ }

userfoundcount++;

break;

}

}

if (userfoundcount < 1)

{

lblInfo.Text = "User not found in the list";

}

else

{

foreach (SPListItem itemL in items)

{

object listItemTitleFieldValue = itemL["Title"];

if (listItemTitleFieldValue != null)

{

if (listItemTitleFieldValue.ToString() == ManagerIdNum.ToString())

{

object listItemEmailFieldValue = itemL["Email"];

if (listItemEmailFieldValue != null)

{ Manager_Email = itemL["Email"].ToString(); }

//Manager_Email = "first getlistitembyemail";

break;

}

}

}

tbxEmpIdNum.Text = Convert.ToString(EmpIdNum);

tbxFirst_Name.Text = First_Name;

tbxMI.Text = MI;

tbxLast_Name.Text = Last_Name;

tbxEmail.Text = Email;

tbxJob_Title.Text = Job_Title;

tbxManager_Email.Text = Manager_Email;

}

}

---------------------------------------------------------- More code below--------------------

I think the key that is missing in this code would be you catching the query string on the web page but that is basic asp.net stuff, what you are wanting to do is iterate thru a list and filter it based on a list item column field value which is what this code does.

Thank hope this helps,

Shane Gibson

ICC Co.

From: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com [mailto:sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Roger
Sent: Friday, February 03, 2012 7:15 AM
To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [sharepointdiscussions] Querystring Variable in List View?

Yeah, that was my thought. But my Google searches keep pointing to SPD though. Time to break out the SP Object Model poster!

________________________________
From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com <mailto:peter.brunone%40gmail.com> >
To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com <mailto:sharepointdiscussions%40yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Thursday, February 2, 2012 11:11 PM
Subject: Re: [sharepointdiscussions] Querystring Variable in List View?

Oh. Well, I've never tried to filter a list view in Visual Studio, but if
you can do it in SPD, I'm pretty sure there's a way to do it in VS.NET.

On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 9:32 PM, Roger <frontierrog@yahoo.com <mailto:frontierrog%40yahoo.com> > wrote:

> No, doing this in Visual Studio.
>
> --- On Thu, 2/2/12, Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com <mailto:peter.brunone%40gmail.com> > wrote:
>
> From: Peter Brunone <peter.brunone@gmail.com <mailto:peter.brunone%40gmail.com> >
>
> Are you using Designer for this? You can create a parameter that
> gets its
>
> value from the querystring param and then filter your XSLT data view based
>
> on that.
>
>
>
> There's more flexibility in the SPD approach, but if you need to go with
>
> out-of-the-box components, you should be able to use a querystring filter
>
> web part and connect it to the list view web part.
>
>
>
> On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 3:48 PM, <frontierrog@yahoo.com <mailto:frontierrog%40yahoo.com> > wrote:
>
>
>
> > In SP2007, I am trying to use a querystring variable in a list view. Is
> it
>
> > possible to do this? In the UI or code? As an example, what I am trying
> to
>
> > do is display all invoices for a certain customer in a view. How can I
>
> > accomplish that?
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

2a.

PM/BA tools and resources

Posted by: "Shane Gibson" shane.gibson.lsg@gmail.com   shane_gibson_lsg

Fri Feb 3, 2012 8:42 am (PST)



Is there and good sites, samples, tools, and/or resources for writing SharePoint requirements? In example would I document a functional requirement as:: site XYZ will have a calendar, an announcements section, a news section, there will be a list with x# of metadata columns, and a view that displays… Etc. are those typical types of functional requirements you document and what should be assumptions:: AD is setup and functioning, there will be 2 developer resources provided by client...? What am I supposed to document in the requirements without going overboard and without rehashing OOTB functionality? Anything dealing with writing requirements for SharePoint would be helpful. Thanks in advance.

Thanks Shane Gibson

2b.

Re: PM/BA tools and resources

Posted by: "Peter Brunone" peter.brunone@gmail.com   peter_brunone

Fri Feb 3, 2012 8:50 am (PST)



Hi Shane,

Just an off-the-cuff reaction, but if you have to stop and define a term
(e.g. "metadata column") to a business user, then it probably shouldn't be
in functional requirements.

Functional reqs are about what the end user needs to accomplish. A good
guide for this is the concept of the User Story, as employed in Agile
project management. The basic format is as follows:

As a _______ (what type of user),

I want _________

so that I can ___________

This kind of requirement requires (heh) that you also define acceptance
criteria, i.e. a list of end results by which you can determine that the
requirement has been fulfilled.

HTH,

Peter

On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 6:03 PM, Shane Gibson <shane.gibson.lsg@gmail.com>wrote:

> Is there and good sites, samples, tools, and/or resources for writing
> SharePoint requirements? In example would I document a functional
> requirement as:: site XYZ will have a calendar, an announcements section, a
> news section, there will be a list with x# of metadata columns, and a view
> that displays� Etc. are those typical types of functional requirements you
> document and what should be assumptions:: AD is setup and functioning,
> there will be 2 developer resources provided by client...? What am I
> supposed to document in the requirements without going overboard and
> without rehashing OOTB functionality? Anything dealing with writing
> requirements for SharePoint would be helpful. Thanks in advance.
>
> Thanks Shane Gibson
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

2c.

Re: PM/BA tools and resources

Posted by: "Shane Gibson" shane.gibson.lsg@gmail.com   shane_gibson_lsg

Fri Feb 3, 2012 10:16 am (PST)



Thanks Peter, that gives me a good start to think about "reverse
engineering" my meeting notes so to speak, for example in our HR Dept.
meeting with the client, they said something along the lines of "I want to
see a database of all our employees, with things like there demographics,
but also want the see the benefits they enrolled in, their spouse &
children's names, etc. right now we are keeping it in a spreadsheet on my
desktop, backed up to the network share" and they went on with that. So what
you are saying is I should review my notes and put it in as requirements
document as follows:

1.1
----------------------------------------------------------
-------------------
As the HR Department Employee
I want to see a centralized list of all employees records on our department
site
so I can drill down into a specific employee record.
----------------------------------------------------------
-------------------

So where do I put the specifics of the field values they want to see? I am a
developer at heart that has moved into a PM/BA role, so as a developer I
think:

Employee list view trimmed down for above but then I see:
When they click an individual employee id num (which is the title column
linked to the item) they see all the other Emp info in the view .aspx screen

Really just OOTB functionality, but the project specifics need configured
with SP, but I still need to document it as above b/c we are pretending the
developer has no clue there of? Again where do I put the specifics of the
fields? Do I do another functional requirement based on same user
perspective as below like:

1.2
----------------------------------------------------------
-------------------
As the HR Department Employee
I want to see a list of all employees information such as: SS#, Emp Name,
Emp Num, benefits type, spouse name, etc. (I would list all in FR)
so I can view or choose to edit the employees information
----------------------------------------------------------
-------------------

Seems, like I need to play tech stupid and pretend the developer has no idea
of what I am talking about. Am I on the right track there? Another question,
do I then number them and add to a trace matrix for results on test cases of
the other side, to trace back if something got missed? I came from a very
dysfunctional place where we did none of this, it was met and bang it out
quickly, so it's a bit of an adjustment for me. Thanks Peter appreciate it!

Trace matrix would have
1.0 - Employee records list
1.1 View all records
1.2 View individual records

-----Original Message-----
From: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Peter Brunone
Sent: Friday, February 03, 2012 11:51 AM
To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [sharepointdiscussions] PM/BA tools and resources

Hi Shane,

Just an off-the-cuff reaction, but if you have to stop and define a term
(e.g. "metadata column") to a business user, then it probably shouldn't be
in functional requirements.

Functional reqs are about what the end user needs to accomplish. A good
guide for this is the concept of the User Story, as employed in Agile
project management. The basic format is as follows:

As a _______ (what type of user),

I want _________

so that I can ___________

This kind of requirement requires (heh) that you also define acceptance
criteria, i.e. a list of end results by which you can determine that the
requirement has been fulfilled.

HTH,

Peter

On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 6:03 PM, Shane Gibson
<shane.gibson.lsg@gmail.com>wrote:

> Is there and good sites, samples, tools, and/or resources for writing
> SharePoint requirements? In example would I document a functional
> requirement as:: site XYZ will have a calendar, an announcements
> section, a news section, there will be a list with x# of metadata
> columns, and a view that displays. Etc. are those typical types of
> functional requirements you document and what should be assumptions::
> AD is setup and functioning, there will be 2 developer resources
> provided by client...? What am I supposed to document in the
> requirements without going overboard and without rehashing OOTB
> functionality? Anything dealing with writing requirements for SharePoint
would be helpful. Thanks in advance.
>
> Thanks Shane Gibson
>
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

------------------------------------

Yahoo! Groups Links

2d.

Re: PM/BA tools and resources

Posted by: "Peter Brunone" peter.brunone@gmail.com   peter_brunone

Fri Feb 3, 2012 11:04 am (PST)



The specifics would go into the acceptance criteria. As the agile guys
will tell you, a user story is really "a reminder to have a conversation".
The user story gives a broad idea of one particular piece of desired
functionality; from there, the appropriate team members should flesh out
the acceptance criteria so you know when the story is completed. In your
case, one particular criterion for the employee detail page story might
look like this:

"The employee detail view shows the following fields: first name, last
name, employee ID number, current sick days, and favorite kind of dog."

The employee list would be a different story from the employee detail.
Each piece of functionality gets its own story to minimize confusion.

There's a whole lot more to Agile methodology than this, but hopefully you
can already see its value in organizing the thoughts of various team
members.

On Fri, Feb 3, 2012 at 11:42 AM, Shane Gibson <shane.gibson.lsg@gmail.com>wrote:

> Thanks Peter, that gives me a good start to think about "reverse
> engineering" my meeting notes so to speak, for example in our HR Dept.
> meeting with the client, they said something along the lines of "I want to
> see a database of all our employees, with things like there demographics,
> but also want the see the benefits they enrolled in, their spouse &
> children's names, etc. right now we are keeping it in a spreadsheet on my
> desktop, backed up to the network share" and they went on with that. So
> what
> you are saying is I should review my notes and put it in as requirements
> document as follows:
>
> 1.1
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> -------------------
> As the HR Department Employee
> I want to see a centralized list of all employees records on our department
> site
> so I can drill down into a specific employee record.
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> -------------------
>
> So where do I put the specifics of the field values they want to see? I am
> a
> developer at heart that has moved into a PM/BA role, so as a developer I
> think:
>
> Employee list view trimmed down for above but then I see:
> When they click an individual employee id num (which is the title column
> linked to the item) they see all the other Emp info in the view .aspx
> screen
>
> Really just OOTB functionality, but the project specifics need configured
> with SP, but I still need to document it as above b/c we are pretending the
> developer has no clue there of? Again where do I put the specifics of the
> fields? Do I do another functional requirement based on same user
> perspective as below like:
>
> 1.2
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> -------------------
> As the HR Department Employee
> I want to see a list of all employees information such as: SS#, Emp Name,
> Emp Num, benefits type, spouse name, etc. (I would list all in FR)
> so I can view or choose to edit the employees information
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> -------------------
>
> Seems, like I need to play tech stupid and pretend the developer has no
> idea
> of what I am talking about. Am I on the right track there? Another
> question,
> do I then number them and add to a trace matrix for results on test cases
> of
> the other side, to trace back if something got missed? I came from a very
> dysfunctional place where we did none of this, it was met and bang it out
> quickly, so it's a bit of an adjustment for me. Thanks Peter appreciate it!
>
> Trace matrix would have
> 1.0 - Employee records list
> 1.1 View all records
> 1.2 View individual records
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
> On Behalf Of Peter Brunone
> Sent: Friday, February 03, 2012 11:51 AM
>
> Hi Shane,
>
> Just an off-the-cuff reaction, but if you have to stop and define a term
> (e.g. "metadata column") to a business user, then it probably shouldn't be
> in functional requirements.
>
> Functional reqs are about what the end user needs to accomplish. A good
> guide for this is the concept of the User Story, as employed in Agile
> project management. The basic format is as follows:
>
> As a _______ (what type of user),
>
> I want _________
>
> so that I can ___________
>
> This kind of requirement requires (heh) that you also define acceptance
> criteria, i.e. a list of end results by which you can determine that the
> requirement has been fulfilled.
>
> HTH,
>
> Peter
>
> On Thu, Feb 2, 2012 at 6:03 PM, Shane Gibson
> <shane.gibson.lsg@gmail.com>wrote:
>
> > Is there and good sites, samples, tools, and/or resources for writing
> > SharePoint requirements? In example would I document a functional
> > requirement as:: site XYZ will have a calendar, an announcements
> > section, a news section, there will be a list with x# of metadata
> > columns, and a view that displays. Etc. are those typical types of
> > functional requirements you document and what should be assumptions::
> > AD is setup and functioning, there will be 2 developer resources
> > provided by client...? What am I supposed to document in the
> > requirements without going overboard and without rehashing OOTB
> > functionality? Anything dealing with writing requirements for SharePoint
> would be helpful. Thanks in advance.
> >
> > Thanks Shane Gibson
>

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

3a.

Re: Ask Me about not saving under user profiles

Posted by: "John Teddman" john_teddy2000@yahoo.com   john_teddy2000

Fri Feb 3, 2012 12:28 pm (PST)



thank you for your reply. I have checked our service apps, and found out that the web application was set to the wrong service up for metadata, I updated that, and everything works fine!

________________________________
From: Paul Stork <pstork@att.net>
To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Thursday, February 2, 2012 4:47 PM
Subject: RE: [sharepointdiscussions] Ask Me about not saving under user profiles


 
The AskMeAbout user profile field uses a managed metadata term set for
storing its values. So there could be several issues.

1 ) If a managed metadata service app isn't available you won't be able to
edit the field.

2) if a specific term set has been chosen the user may not have permission
to add anything to the term set. If so an admin must pre-populate values
for the user to pick from or they won't be able to edit the field

3) if a specific term set hasn't been chosen but permissions on the default
term store have been modified the user may not have the ability to enter new
items. See #2

Those are the things I would check first.

Paul Papanek Stork

Chief Architect . ShareSquared, Inc. . <http://www.sharesquared.com/>
http://www.ShareSquared.com

The SharePoint Solution Experts!

<https://mvp.support.microsoft.com/profile=6D05CC8D-32ED-4626-A29E-142DC7A68
0E0> SharePoint MVP, MBA, MCT, MCSE+I, MCSA, MCSD, MCDBA, MCITP, MCPD

<mailto:Paul.Stork@ShareSquared.com> Paul.Stork@ShareSquared.com .
800.445.1279 x404

blog: <http://dontpapanic.com/blog> http://dontpapanic.com/blog . twitter:
<http://twitter.com/pstork> @pstork

The information contained in this e-mail message may be privileged,
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From: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of needtoknowbasis
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2012 4:27 PM
To: sharepointdiscussions@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [sharepointdiscussions] Ask Me about not saving under user profiles

So I receive an email from a user stating that whenever he tries and add
terms to his " ask me about" on his profile and hit save, it doesn't save
it. I went ahead and tried it on my profile, system user profile, it doesn't
work. I double checked the properties under The user service app, and the
user properties, and everything looks normal.

any ideas? suggestions as to where to look and what to do?

thanks

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

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