Joined: January 6th, 2005, 8:56 pm Posts: 330 Location: Houston, Republic of Texas
Opus: 8
OS: W7 Pro
System: Dell Precision T5500, 8 core Dual Xeon 2.13 GHz, 24 GB RAM, All SSD drives
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Whilst waiting on an answer to my latest dumb question, thought I'd take the time to get this one off.
For those of us in the commercial end, having a printable flowchart of all the pages and links would be awesome. All my simulations at Level 3 or 4 are first presented to the client in a visio or autocad flowchart. Then, I create (as I am doing now) a "Functional Flowchart' which contains all the links and logic, but know visuals other than placekeepers. This enables the client to really get a feel for the finished product and make changes before the really expensive programming part takes place. When they are happy, I turn the FuncFlow over to the programmers, who use whatever tools they prefer to realize it from my FuncFlow. This really streamlines communications with them and reduces rework.
The interactive development tool once given away with the late, lamented Amiga had this capability, and remains the best tool I ever used for interactive development even 10 years later. Addition of flowchart generation ability to Opus would move it to equal with that program.
Attached is a PDF file of the flow I am developing in FuncFLow for with Opus at the moment as a reference to what I am talking about.
Best regards,
Dave
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_________________ An objective is a description of a performance you want your learners to be able to exhibit before you consider them competent.
Dr. Robert F. Mager, 1962
"If you can't measure it, it's crap."
David A. Mallette, 1980
For this message Mallette has been thanked by : mackavi
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