On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 10:51 AM, Kevin Falcone <[email protected]> wrote: >> The best I can say is that I *loathe* having to ask questions of >> mailing lists and IRC channels, as I expect to get answers like this. >> I seriously hate getting replies intoning that the information is >> readily available, so I do the best I can using Google and reading all >> the available documentation I can find. I may have spent more than an >> hour looking for that precise piece of information, but I spent more >> than a week digging through all the available documentation on the >> wiki and BestPractical's website docs. The wiki consists primarily of >> tutorials. > > Found in the second hit on the wiki after typing Scrip into the search > box. > http://requesttracker.wikia.com/wiki/ScripExecOrder > Should be updated to reflect 4.2, but such is life. > > Trivially testable too. > Condition: ON Create > Action: User Defined > Prepare: 1; > Commit: RT->Logger->error("I'm the first scrip"); > Template: Blank
So, there's my problem. I didn't use *Wikia's* search field for that particular query, I used raw Google and DuckDuckgo. (Well, could also be because I didn't use a simple enough query, but such is life.) This particular wiki's search functionality is more useful than the built-in search features of the vast majority out there. Noted. > > That's as much time as I have this week to search the wiki > and mailing list archives for things I've written. > >> I apologize if I'm a bit bristly, but I've always spent at least >> several hours searching and reading before opening a thread on a >> mailing list or IRC channel, because I hate "RTFM" or "LMGTFY" >> responses. > > I actually generally don't bother answering questions that I've > answered within the last two weeks. This was an exception because I > saw things being led astray. Fair enough. > >> Good to know. I did not find documentation describing the precise >> processing behavior of RT scrips. > > Patches welcome. Knowing the processing behavior is the first step to being able to author one. -- :wq -- RT Training - Boston, September 9-10 http://bestpractical.com/training
