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Web Content Management with Documentum

You're reading from   Web Content Management with Documentum Setup, Design, Develop, and Deploy Documentum Applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2006
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781904811091
Length 484 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Table of Contents (33) Chapters Close

Web Content Management with Documentum
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgements
1. Preface
1. Content and Documentum FREE CHAPTER 2. Documentum Essentials 3. Documentum Advanced Concepts 4. Web Content Management System 5. Setting Up the Documentum Suite 6. Creating Our First Docbase 7. Setting Up Publishing 8. Setting Up Documentum Application Builder 9. Setting Up Documentum Administrator and Web Publisher 10. Designing Documentum Applications 11. Designing and Creating Custom Object Types 12. Creating Lifecycles, Alias Sets, and Permission Sets 13. Working with Web Publisher Template Files 14. Creating Rules Files 15. Creating Presentation Files 16. Folder Mapping 17. Using Instruction Files 18. Automatic Property Extraction (APE) 19. Working with Workflows 20. Testing Custom Workflows 21. Publishing from Docbase Using SCS 22. Web Viewing Content Files 23. Using DFC 24. Configurations and Customizations Using WDK 25. Documentum Deployment 26. Using DQL and API Commands Frequently Asked Questions and Answers
New Features and Enhancements in Release 5.3

3.10 Registered Tables


Most applications maintain some application tables in order to store data specific to the application. These application tables may contain records that Documentum clients need access to. For example, a dropdown in a Documentum client application might need to display a list of all the countries in the world from an external database table, so that the content author can choose one while creating content.

The external database table is not known to the Content Server until you register it. In short, registered tables are the normal RDBMS tables that the Content Server is aware of, in spite of them not being part of the Docbase.

Documentum creates a dm_registered object for the 'Registered' table, allowing developers to use DQL queries to fetch the information from the table.

The dm_registered object contains information about the name of the table, table owner, table columns, and access rights defining who has access to query the table and perform operations like insert...

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