W
wwsmurf
After reading the ten bulls,
(http://www.expressionsofspirit.com/10bulls/tenbulls.htm),
I decided that each of my classes would contain the same
five sections:
1. Notices
2. Facts
3. Concepts
4. Questions
5. Concerns
Also, there is a section for "information" that lies above the class folders.
I find that I must spend quite a bit of effort entering all the sections,
and I think it would be better to have some mechanism for this. Let's plot
this out:
We could:
I. Ignore this issue.
II. Provide a mechanism to allow the user to define small lists of
predefined sections which can then be inserted via a stored procedure.
III. Provide a mechanism whereby a parent folder can be associated with
different structural types within it's subfolders. There will need to be
some distinction between Organizer folders and Content folders.
(http://www.expressionsofspirit.com/10bulls/tenbulls.htm),
I decided that each of my classes would contain the same
five sections:
1. Notices
2. Facts
3. Concepts
4. Questions
5. Concerns
Also, there is a section for "information" that lies above the class folders.
I find that I must spend quite a bit of effort entering all the sections,
and I think it would be better to have some mechanism for this. Let's plot
this out:
We could:
I. Ignore this issue.
II. Provide a mechanism to allow the user to define small lists of
predefined sections which can then be inserted via a stored procedure.
III. Provide a mechanism whereby a parent folder can be associated with
different structural types within it's subfolders. There will need to be
some distinction between Organizer folders and Content folders.