More about Flow Actions
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In your flow, reference local flow actions in the assignment Shape Properties panel. Reference connector flow actions in the connector Shape Properties panel:
By referencing flow actions in your flow, you determine the choices that appear at run time in the Take Action area.
For fields that are always displayed as read-only, you can enter a linked property reference, of the form .AAAA.BBBB, where AAAA is the linked property and BBBB is any property reference in the object identified by the value of AAAA as a key. For example, if the property AAAA has a value corresponding to a key of a Data-Admin-Operator-ID instance, then .AAAA.pyUserName presents that Operator ID's full name. This allows values from that object to appear (read-only) in the run-time display of the section, although your processing does not explicitly load the object onto the clipboard.
The text in the Short Description field of the flow action form appears at run time as a user choice. Consider the following best practices:
@baseclass.pyCaption.name
(where name is the Short Description of the standard rule) and enter the text you want in the Localized Label field.@baseclass.pyCaption.name
(where name is the Short Description of your application flow action) in each language-specific RuleSet. See About the Localization wizard.To build and use a flow action, take these steps:
1. Create a flow action. As you create the flow action, you record several choices. You determine the HTML form or section that appears when a user selects this flow action. You can restrict a flow action to appear only to certain users, based on access roles. Using when conditions, you can conditionalize whether the flow action appears at all.
2. If the flow action is to be local, associate the flow action with an assignment shape in your flow. If the flow action is a connector flow action, associate it with a connector in your flow, with an arrow leading from the assignment shape to another shape on the flow diagram.
3. To test a flow action, log in as a worker or manager with appropriate access roles. Enter the Process Work workspace. Enter a work item for a flow that includes an assignment that references the flow action. As it executes, the flow creates an assignment for the work item and places the assignment on a worklist.
4. Finally, log in as the person whose worklist has the assignment. From your worklist, click the assignment. You see the Perform harness form, and you see the short description of your flow action in the selection box in the Perform form. When you select the flow action, the HTML fields defined for that flow action appear.
After you save a flow action form, click the toolbar Preview button to view an approximate run time rendering of the flow action presentation. (Many flow actions depend on context. Even when the rule is correctly configured, the Preview display may fail and report JSP errors if this flow action depends on clipboard contents that do not exist or other rules that cannot be found.)
Click the Run toolbar button to test the flow action with data from the clipboard. See How to test a flow action.
As with the Form tab, the system renders both the Preview and Run displays using the styles of the skin rule identified in the Using skin preference. If the Using skin field is blank, these displays use the styles marked Work on the Styles tab of the skin identified in your current portal rule.
When you save a flow action, the system converts your HTML and JSP tags or directives to Java source code. As a learning or debugging aid, you can review this Java code.
Select Actions > View Java to see the system-generated Java code that implements the flow action. The window presents a read-only preview of the Java that implements this rule instance. This Java code is not identical to the Java that executes at run time, which includes Java code inlined from other rule instances and reflects rules in the requestor's Rule Set list.
The area of a user form that allows users to choose among flow actions is known as the action section. As a best practice, include the standard action section Work-.pyActionArea on your Perform harnesses. (Other standard action sections introduced in PRPC Version 5 remain available and supported.)
Through directed inheritance, Rule-Obj-FlowAction class is derived from the Rule-HTML-Section class.
In PRPC Version 6 and later, newly created flow actions reference a section for their appearance and layout. The value Reference Section
appears in the HTML Generation field on the HTML tab. The previous design is identified by the Define Form
value in the field.
Flow actions that reference sections promote reuse. For example, two flow actions may have different settings on their Security tab or Action tabs but use identical layouts. Both flow actions can reference one section that contains the layout.
Flow actions built prior to PRPC Version 6.1 are not supported for development but will continue to function in your applications without error. You cannot edit the layouts on the Layout tab. To upgrade the flow actions in bulk or individually, use the standard pxShowBulkFlowActionDisplay activity. It creates a section with the same name and links the section to the flow action. For examples, see the PDN article 25978 How to convert flow actions to the V6.1 section reference form.
If the original flow action contained required fields (usually marked with an asterisk icon), select the Enable Client Side Validation? check box on the new flow action's HTML tab and save the rule.You can (in upgraded flow actions) save layouts as sections using the Save As Section icon, which is located in the wireframe's layout header. See Flow Action form – Completing the Layout tab. Note that the icon appears only in flow actions that have been upgraded.
If your application rulesets contain flow actions that are not auto-generated, run the Rule Security Analyzer before locking a ruleset Version, to look for possible security issues.
assignment, connector, likelihood, local flow action | |
Atlas — Standard flow actions (Connector/Local) Atlas — Standard flow actions (Local) |