I'm a newbie at SharePoint and am trying to decide if it is suitable out of the box for an application I'm working on.
I have experience in Access and relational database design in general. This seems like a stripped down approach to that.
Hoping someone who is a SharePoint guru can help answer some questions for me and perhaps help me make some design/structure decisions.
I'm trying to make an Inventory tracking system. A component of this tracking system is a calibration log.
First question I have is in regards to "Lists". If I have a column type of "Choice (menu to choose from)" with the added "Allow 'Fill-in' choices" selected, is there a way to have an option that was filled in by the user added to the drop down list?
What if I want the Choices to be based on a column in another list (in order to create a relationship with an item in another table)?
I could see a list of Devices with some Choice selections (like Manufacturer) where I want to be able to link the Manufacturer to another list.
Am I just abusing the hell out of what the simplicity of a list should be and trying to make this into a relational database when it is not? Thanks.
I'd basically agree. The only point I would add is to be careful not to treat science as a religion, complete with priests, dogma, and blasphemy.
Humans are highly susceptible to religious-oriented ways of thinking since it aids in forming communities of like-minded people. The problem is that when this happens, nobody wants to be ostracized from the group by saying that a deeply-held idea is wrong. Science and "peer review" are not immune to this behavior, unfortunately.
In the end, finding truth is our own responsibility and we can't depend on others to hand it to us. Skepticism is key, along with curiosity and the willingness to critically evaluate and consider ideas both new and old.
I would use BitWarden or 1Password long before I used Chromes password manager. A browser is the piece of software that actually interfaces with the internet. If it has a vulnerability and houses your passwords??
KeePassXC does support passkeys. In Firefox I know you can turn off the thing where Firefox offers to save passwords. On Android KeepassDX (the mobile client) supports autofill
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Question
Shadrack
I'm a newbie at SharePoint and am trying to decide if it is suitable out of the box for an application I'm working on.
I have experience in Access and relational database design in general. This seems like a stripped down approach to that.
Hoping someone who is a SharePoint guru can help answer some questions for me and perhaps help me make some design/structure decisions.
I'm trying to make an Inventory tracking system. A component of this tracking system is a calibration log.
First question I have is in regards to "Lists". If I have a column type of "Choice (menu to choose from)" with the added "Allow 'Fill-in' choices" selected, is there a way to have an option that was filled in by the user added to the drop down list?
What if I want the Choices to be based on a column in another list (in order to create a relationship with an item in another table)?
I could see a list of Devices with some Choice selections (like Manufacturer) where I want to be able to link the Manufacturer to another list.
Am I just abusing the hell out of what the simplicity of a list should be and trying to make this into a relational database when it is not? Thanks.
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