I wanted a task to let the user fill out some information as long as that information has not been provided. Each time they login they would get this task but as soon as the information was there it would no longer popup. To achieve this I found this topic: Open a screen first time and ignore it the next timeHowever in this topic one of the answers was:"I'm not sure the suppresses message will work in all (future) GUIs." hereSince the topic is more than 2 years old I started thinking of a different solution.The condition to show or hide the task is does the employee table have a record that contains the login user.dbo.tsf_user()1. Create task 'provide_user_information'This task asks for the first name, last name and email address of the employee. The task does not require confirmation, neither does it contain a template 2. Create a process flow 'provide_user_information_once'This flow solely consists of the task 'provide_user_information' 3. Create a layout for the task 'lay_provide_u
I would like to be able to kill abandoned or long running system flows. Sometimes a flow gets abandoned but the signal is not picked up by indicium/universal and it looks like it is still running. It would be very helpful to be able to kill any systemflow from deployed applications that runs for over a certain amount of time. Ideally the amount of time could be configured by the developers, something like we expect this flow to last for 5 minutes and if longer than 30 we want to be able to kill it.
I am running into a scenario where I want to show a graph for salary growth where 4 persons are shown at once. Horizontal axis I want the dates and on the vertical axis I want the amount they earn. Once somebody got a raise I want it to be represented on that date. For example, for one person it would look like this: Once we add more collegues and fill the graph with more data we get empty fields, because not everybody gets a raise on the same date. This results in a graph that is scattered and has gaps. I know in excel you can connect these gaps in graphs (https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/office/display-empty-cells-null-n-a-values-and-hidden-worksheet-data-in-a-chart-a1ee6f0c-192f-4248-abeb-9ca49cb92274) It would be awesome if we could connect the dots like this in Thinkwise as well.
In the Software Factory when working with process flows it can be a litle confusing/hard to see which action is which. For example we have 4 open document ‘supplier’ actions. Each opens a different variant. Now it is quite hard to see which is which. Especially when you want to connect nodes.Idea would be to show the variant name supplier (price_component_validation)
It would be nice to be able to disable import/export for a detail view and still be able to import in the regular subject view (grid).
We have a system flow that runs every minute. Most of the time it does not do anything. However sometimes it does quite a lot. This process takes up to more than a few minutes. This is aboslutely no problem. Except that this makes the indicium log file flood itself with ‘procsess still running’ exceptions. How can we get indicium not to report this? 2023-03-22T11:38:00.3653547+01:00 [ERR] Error scheduling system flow '"flow_export_message"' for application 35. (b95a9b29)System.Exception: An exception occurred while trying to log the start of the system flow. ---> Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlException (0x80131904): <msg id="system_flow_still_running"></msg> at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlConnection.OnError(SqlException exception, Boolean breakConnection, Action`1 wrapCloseInAction) at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.TdsParser.ThrowExceptionAndWarning(TdsParserStateObject stateObj, Boolean callerHasConnectionLock, Boolean asyncClose) at Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.TdsParser.
With regards to the icon library, I find myself to replace icons by accident. This modifies ofcourse all current instances of the icon.To my opinion it is too easy to change an icon. I would like to have a little warning when an icon already is in use. Something like “do you know for sure, the icon is already in use on the following places: …. “
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