L Shaped Tanle

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Trisha Quercioli

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Aug 5, 2024, 1:24:35 AM8/5/24
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Hello we are now working on international site design ,so many table need to have relation to the same shaped small translation table , which store translation for each langueges like left side of the image (Design#1).

Currently we have an idea to merge translation table like right side of the image (Design#2), but I'm not clear this design is good or bad. Could you tell me Design#2 is good or bad idea ?Also if you have another solution for this case , please give me an advice.


I have a table that represents a tree of nodes (well multiple trees but each node has a field that specifies the tree so filtering by that is trivial.) It has a ParentId field and a Sequence field to specify the ordering of nodes inside each level.


All of this is likely enough work that it's not worth doing until other concerns are addressed. So a "quick fix" would be preferred but if there's a proper way to do this I would like to know that too, as it'll have to be done at some point anyway.


I don't need to recalculate every column but I do need to recalculate every row. I could shuffle around the columns and join them in the form datasources but that might be even more effort than copying a few "static" columns during recalc.


First of all, consider whether your approach is correct. Do you really have to throw everything away and build the data set from scratch every time when someone wants to refresh the data? Can't buildFromRegular prepares data for all cases and you'll merely filter this data as needed?


If throwing everything is necessary, change buildFromRegular() to accept the buffer (ProcedureBreakdownTmp_BEC_Satisfied) as a parameter (instead of returning another buffer). Delete data from this buffer and then insert new data there. Then let the form to execute the query.


I'm not quite sure what you meant by your last post. The variable is filled during form init() from the record selected in the previous form. It serves to filter all datasources on the form and is never overwritten. I copied this from other forms but if there's a better way I'd be happy to give it a shot.


I do have one more issue: I can't get this data to refresh based on certain actions. This Tree-shaped data represents a collection of requirements and another table assigns resources to the procedure. During the call to "buildFromRegular" I am checking each requirement if it is met by the assigned resources at that time.


The problem with your code is that you don't set the data to any data source used by the form. According to your previous code, breakdownTmp is just a variable declared by yourself and it's not displayed anywhere. Youi need to use the buffer used by the data source. It has the same as the data source node: procedureBreakdownTmp_BEC_Satisfied.


As for InMemory tables: I don't know. I've looked up some articles and changed the buildFromRegular method to return the table buffer which I then use on a table buffer held on the form via setTmpData. But that doesn't display any data either.


I'm not sure what I'm still doing wrong. All I know is that all the examples I find - from my perspective - are incomplete and assume I have the knowledge to properly integrate them. Unfortunately I don't know *what* I'm missing...


linkPhysicalTableInstance() should be called on a table buffer, not on a data source. Also note that this method is used with TempDB tables - are you sure that InMemory wouldn't be better in your case?


The next article I found -table-form-datasource-populated-using-evgeniy-voloshchenko goes about doing something with "useExistingTempDBTable" which, again, doesn't throw and errors but also doesn't show any data either.


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Pipedrive has moved to new offices in Prague just one week before the general lock-down in March 2020. It took five more months to completely finish it and now we can finally present it to the world! The office is unique, it's special and it's full of emotions and Pipedrive culture built right in. Most importantly, I've learnt many things about office design in the process, so I think it would be nice to share some!


That's why I made building an office a very high priority. I wanted to hire an office manager from day 1. Even before we had a team to talk about. It was such a bold move, I even had to convince myself by writing an article why do we need an office manager for a team of 2 ?


And whatever I wrote there back then, is still true today. Markta has had a chance to absorb the Pipedrive culture, see the team's habits and the way of working and at the end tailor the office experience to perfectly fit our needs. And of course, to become the living heart of the office.


Back to early 2019 - the office market was peaking before the Covid-19 epidemic, so nobody would want to lease us an office for less than 6-7 years. With only 6 people already hired at that time, it's understandable the company didn't want to risk a big investment into the office space when the team was too small and too young, with no hiring pattern to see.


So we had to be patient and wait a bit. Which was a good thing at the end, since we could wait for the right space to show up, we were in no hurry. Not being in a hurry is a good thing on a real estate market ?


So let's talk about the things I do take credit for (at least partially) and what I think are the traits of a good office for modern software engineering teams, based on my 20 years of experience of building software in various different environments.


The default fit out by the developer was based on an open-space layout. I can understand why is it a standard these days - it's so much cheaper than building walls. I cannot even believe how much have we spent on building walls for separate rooms. That was a big learning - you get to understand how much things cost pretty fast. Hint: It's a lot! ?


Back to the open-space idea. I've spent my fair share of time in open space areas and I'm one of the people who don't mind them. And I also do believe people who cannot stand them, so I think it's really not about flame wars between two kind of people, but how do you find a balance to respect the needs of everyone?


Individual offices may sound comfortable and productive, however I don't believe they're the answer either. Even if you have the money for those extra walls. I've never sat in one myself, but I've seen enough of bad examples of inability to communicate between people in the same building within Microsoft in their Redmond headquarters. At times, I had to fly over from Europe to lure people out of their offices to a common meeting room to finally talk. ?


Our team rooms fit 8-12 people in general and combine the best of the two worlds. The room is large enough to fit a team of people who closely collaborate on a project (a Mission in Pipedrive terms). At the same time it's small enough so the team can close the door and get a focus time uninterrupted from the other noise in the office. Win-win. ?


To keep the entire space playful and creative, we have avoided straight corridors and rectangular shapes. Instead the shapes of the rooms and corridors follow honeycomb shapes and patterns. For this idea I actually don't take any credit, that's the ingenuity of the architects from the Perspektiv studio. In real life, being in that space is even better than it looked on paper. I highly recommend, team offices don't need to be boring.

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