Community Tip - You can subscribe to a forum, label or individual post and receive email notifications when someone posts a new topic or reply. Learn more! X
Our WTParts and EPM Documents are normally in the same Workflow.
I want to change it for one Lifecyclestep. Where can i change it?
Solved! Go to Solution.
Hi,
I was thinking that you wanted to continue to use the same WF template.
Now that you dont want to constraint with that , then the most flexible approach would be to define separate LC templates, one for CAD and other for Part. I have not come across a capability where within the same LC template its possible to define different Workflows for different types., this being not there, the only solution seems to use 2 different LC templates.
Once done that you can have seperate WFs for CAD and Part ( eventhough the before and after LC states are same).
Hope its clear now.
Cheers
Hari
Hi,
If your intention is to continue to use the common WF template, then in this case you need to introduce an expression robot after the set state robot (the state where you want to fork the work flow).
In that expression robot you need to give the branching based on the Primary Business Object type.
After the two forks are made , make sure to return to the common flow again.
Hope you get the point.
Cheers
Hari
this means i have to change the workflow?
i already have the two worksflow which i dont want to change. one should raise the WTParts and the other should raise the EPM Documents from same lifecylce state to same lifecycle state
Hi,
I was thinking that you wanted to continue to use the same WF template.
Now that you dont want to constraint with that , then the most flexible approach would be to define separate LC templates, one for CAD and other for Part. I have not come across a capability where within the same LC template its possible to define different Workflows for different types., this being not there, the only solution seems to use 2 different LC templates.
Once done that you can have seperate WFs for CAD and Part ( eventhough the before and after LC states are same).
Hope its clear now.
Cheers
Hari