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• #117602
Describing to dev.
I actually want both the column displayed and the field value to be displayed...
As a user I want to see the client's favourite restaurant because reasons.
Although may also need it displayed in another place.
I'm just prang I've been using attribute and sounding like I've been using Pacific instead of specific.
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• #117603
This is quite different from what you originally asked. Can you give an example of the actual output you want to see? You can include examples in user stories too.
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• #117604
if it's like
customer_id : { favourite_restaurant : "place" }
then I'd ask for the favourite_restaurant value for that customer.
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• #117605
CLIENT_ID SECTOR RELATIONSHIP_MANAGER
abc123 fmg chezjay
xyz123 fs bq
xyz567 fs mmccarthy
• #117606- When I am in CLM and look at a client then I want to see a column called 'relationship manager'
- If sector = 'fmg' then I want the system to display the value for the ___ called 'relationship manager'
(I know putting a noun in front is probably redundant, and the story is a bit rough)
e.g. An output like this:
CLIENT_ID SECTOR RELATIONSHIP_MANAGER
abc123 fmg chezjay
xyz123 fs
xyz567 fs
• #117607Thanks. That's what I thought.
What about the column header name in the DB where you go to look for the value?
I.e. What are "CLIENT_ID", "SECTOR", and "RELATIONSHIP_MANAGER"?
• #117608Follow-up question I guess is an easily accessible dictionary for this stuff.
• #117609I.e. What are "CLIENT_ID", "SECTOR", and "RELATIONSHIP_MANAGER"?
field names, column names, column headers. any of those would make sense to me as a dev
relational database terminology or sql terminology is probably what you're after
there'll be slightly different terms depending on what language it's being developed in, but everyone (dev) will/should know some basic sql terminology and how that applies to their language of choice
• #117610but everyone (dev) will/should know some basic sql terminology and how that applies to their language of choice
This ^, and combined with examples like what have been shown above, will be much more valuable than giving the exact term. Which as you can see by the disagreement between several people who work in software in the previous responses, isn't really all that black & white.
• #117611Have a look at some example SQL queries, it might help put words to what you want.
https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/sql-tutorial-introduction
https://www.w3schools.com/sql/sql_select.asp
https://www.w3schools.com/sql/trysql.asp?filename=trysql_select_columns• #117612Thanks all.
This has been helpful as well as interesting.
• #117613Are clamp-on vices worth it? Or do you always end up buying a bolt-on in the end?
• #117614Depends how much force you need to put into it
• #117615If a vice is your third hand, clamp-on will work. If it's your second human, you're going to need it bolted to something heavier than you.
• #117616My mountain bike is set up singlespeed, full suspension with a tensioner.
It has a narrow-wide chainring.
Would a bmx/singlespeed chain be better or would a 10/11/12 speed chain have better retention on the narrow-wide chainring? Is there any difference in the internal dimensions of a chain or are they all basically the same?
• #117617Excellent analogy.
• #117618I find one really useful, cutting nuts/pipe, soldering cable connectors, drilling small items. Beyond that a bigger one is much more useful though.
• #117619Is there any difference in the internal dimensions of a chain or are they all basically the same?
Some chains marketed as singlespeed/BMX/track will have side plates which overlap the rollers by enough to interfere with the relief cuts on a NW chain ring, so they won't mesh correctly. I'm using a KMC X1 on a SRAM 10-speed NW ring, so that's a known good combination.
• #117620Perfect! Thanks
• #117621As Tester suggests - much depends on the clamp, and what you're clamping it to.
The little Draper was bought to fasten to a hall of residence desk in the 80s, and it still sees frequent use, particularly where solder, paint or glue is involved.
I have a Record No.3 firmly bolted to a bench, but it's sometimes convenient to have other options, hence the other vice attached to a significant clamp.tldr; sometimes and probably.
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• #117622I have many vices?
• #117623Yes.
• #117624Record or nothing!
• #117625Yo dawg...
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