Photo dojo template english7/11/2023 The current plan involves upgrading our TC Engineering instance in place, using some of the out of the box utilities for renaming types and changing item type - namely, item_to_part_design - and then installing the model I’ve been working on to arrive at our final, new, data model. Anyways, I’ve been using the BMIDE to design our new data model and others have been working to figure out how to get from the old data model to the new one. In addition to upgrading from Teamcenter Engineering 2007 to Teamcenter 8.3, we’re also transmorgifying our data model at the same time, the precise reasons for which I may review in detail at another time or in another venue. Here’s a story about the latest snag we’ve encountered in the process of migrating from Teamcenter Engineering to Teamcenter 8.3. Datasetsįirst of all, let’s label datasets so that we can always tell what type of dataset they are, regardless of whether they use a custom icon or the default icon: If anyone can verify this one war or the other, please leave a comment.Ī few examples of how I’ve used this will make it clear. According to the documentation it seems that the DisplayName constant was added in 8.1, but I can’t verify if it worked the same way or at all prior to 8.3. Version Information I’ve done this in Teamcenter 8.3. You can also hard-code specific strings of text by enclosing them in quotation marks, and you can join different properties and strings together with the plus sign, +. However, you can override the default value and use other properties. The default value for this constant is $object_name, which means that the display name is whatever value is stored in the object_name property. In the BMIDE application if you open the editor for a business object type you’ll see a section of the first page, entitled Business Object Constants, and within that list of constants you’ll see one called DisplayName. ![]() And best of all, you don’t have to write any custom code to do it. ![]() So today, if you’re using Teamcenter 8.1 or higher, we’ve got a tip for you to add a few descriptive words to your Teamcenter interface to make things a bit more clear. But sometimes a few words would be a lot more useful. Yes, A picture is worth a thousand words, as the saying goes.
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