On Thu, Nov 13, 2014 at 10:24 PM, Dan Covill <[email protected]> wrote:

> Another case in point on this idea:
>
> My auto repair shop client asked me to alter the phone fields on his
> Customer and Work Order records.
> They were originally labelled Home Phone and Work Phone.  He wanted a
> third #, but also a different concept.
> What he wanted were three fields of 20 characters, so that he could put
> phone numbers in priority order, with
> the note afterward.  Almost exactly as Ted's examples:
>    888-555-1212  Work
>    619-272-2411 Cell
>    619-272-8831  Wife
>
> I've done phones that way ever since.
>
> Dan
>
> -------------------


When will we see that you are talking about contacts for a customer.  Maybe
they should have as many as the customer could think of, and the only way
to do that is to make contacts a SEPARATE collection of data that uses a
key back to the customer.

That collection should have a contact type key that the user can
create/edit any type over time.  Do they really need fax numbers today?

-- 
Stephen Russell
Sr. Analyst
Ring Container Technology
Oakland TN

901.246-0159 cell


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