Web ADI Personalization
Web ADI Personalization
dont quite fit your business process. There may be fields you dont use or fields you wish to add. Oracle does apply you to customize a templates layout. Changes that you can make to a template layout are: 1. Adding fields 2. Removing fields 3. Changing a fields placement (context, header, or line) 4. Re-ordering fields 5. Hiding fields 6. Making a fields display only 7. Making a field required 8. Defaulting a value Before we get into an example of customizing a layout, lets talk about the different sections of a template and how Oracle determines where to place the fields on the spreadsheet.
After you have selected your fields, you can change the defaults for the fields. A default can be a constant, an environment variable, a parameter, a value based on a SQL query, or an Excel formula (a value based on another field in the spreadsheet).
After you have determine which fields you are including, their placement, and their defaults, you will click the next button to go to the page that allows you to further refine your layout. In this page you will see four regions: create layout, context, header, and line. In the Create Layout section, you can determine how the spreadsheet will behave when loaded into Excel. Do you want the spreadsheet protected? Use a style sheet? Or, apply filters? In the Context section, you can re-order or hide the fields. In the Header section, you can re-order, make the fields read-only, or hide the fields.
In the Line section, you can set how many rows will appear when you load the spreadsheet, re-order the fields, change their width, or apply a frozen pane to the spreadsheet. The frozen pane is an Excel feature that allows you to keep certain columns in view while you scroll.
Step 7: Change the field order, display attribute, and number of default rows in Excel.
After I have my new function, I can add it to the Project Super User menu. Now Im ready to use my new layout.