Copy or move

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Revision as of 06:33, 22 December 2010 by Rmrubin (Talk | contribs)

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The copy page has many functions. Four obvious ones are: # Saving or backing up formula # Copying ingredient costs or nutrients values from one level to another # Moving a new formula from a test level to a level where it is more visible when it is ready for public access # Copying a ratio from one diet to another There are 2 basic ways to save a formula: # Copy to the same level with a new name # Copy with the same name to a different level. Method 1 is the preferred method. Method 2 should be used to create a new diet based on a old one. Method a poses the following problems when used for the same diet: # Backed up versions will start cluttering up the list of formulas in the workshop. # You can't compare cost or nutrient values changes, because changing an ingredient cost or nutrient value changes it for all formulas at the same level. To see the effect of cost or nutrient values changes, copy the formula to another level (think of it as a folder) and alter the costs or nutrient values there. TGF sometimes refers to a level as a 'control level' or 'control unit'. The Copy page allows to pick the target level for your copy. How do you create a new level? You can do it from the Levels page in the Setup area, but to make easy there is a "New Control Level" button on the Copy page. Normally a new level is created under the level you are currently at. But if you are not at your root level (the level you sign in at), you can check the box that says "Create a control unit at the same level as the current one." This creates a sibling control level. When you return to the Copy page, you can pick the new level as the target level. The Copy Page has several check boxes that control how the copy (or move) behaves. When you copy a formula, by default all boxes are checked. These include the boxes to copy cost and nutrient values. If these boxes are left checked, then costs and nutrients values for all available ingredients in the formula (whether or not they are in the solution) will be copied from the current level to the target level. (This won't happen if.you are copying to the same level with a new name, or copying to a lower level.). Typically you would want to do this the first time you copy a formula into a newly created level. That will establish a base set of prices and nutrient values, which you can then modify. Once you have established prices and values for a level, you will most likely want to uncheck the boxes for copying cost and nutrient values. Otherwise the prices and values in the current level will replace those in the target. The start a copy, click the "submit" button on the copy page. Before the copy executes, the application shows you the validation (preview) page that tells you what is about to happen. If you see that many ingredients are going to have their prices or values copied and you don't want that to happen, click the cancel button and you will go back to the Copy page. The boxes you checked and the items you selected will remain as you left them. Copying a formula to a new parallel level may take a 1-2 minutes if you allowing the copy to bring over ingredient values. If you are not, or if you are copying to the same level with a new name, the copy should go fairly quickly.. Once you have copied a formula to a new level, you can then go to that formula in the workbench and then flip back and forth between levels (using the current-level drop down) to see how different prices and values affect the solution. If you are creating a new diet with a different name at the same level, you can flip back and forth between diets by using the formula drop down. In this case, the prices and values will remain the same (or if you change a price or value for one diet, it will also change for the other). In this case you would changing nutrient requirements or adding or taking away ingredients. The above are just suggestions. You will find many different ways to use levels. --Rmrubin 01:33, 22 December 2010 (EST)