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IBM Sustainability SW Engineering Lifecycle Management Course

course overview

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Overview

This course teaches experienced IBM Engineering Requirements Management DOORS users the basic principles of writing and applying DXL extension language to customize DOORS.

Audience

This course is for experienced DOORS users who want to customize IBM ENGINEERING REQUIREMENTS MANAGEMENT DOORS .

Skills Gained

Upon completion of the course, students will be able to:

  • Process projects, folders, modules, and objects
  • Process traceability
  • Process history
  • Process access rights
  • Process views and view settings
  • Create customized Attribute and Layout DXL
  • Create customized DOORS menus
  • Develop user interfaces

Prerequisites

To benefit from this course, students should have the following skills or experience:

  • Previous knowledge of structured procedural programming, preferably in C
  • Proficiency in IBM Engineering Requirements Management DOORS

Outline

Process projects, folders, modules, and objectsProcess traceabilityProcess historyProcess access rightsProcess views and view settingsCreate customized Attribute and Layout DXLCreate customized DOORS menusDevelop user interfaces

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Thinking about Onsite?

If you need training for 3 or more people, you should ask us about onsite training. Putting aside the obvious location benefit, content can be customised to better meet your business objectives and more can be covered than in a public classroom. Its a cost effective option. One on one training can be delivered too, at reasonable rates.

Submit an enquiry from any page on this site, and let us know you are interested in the requirements box, or simply mention it when we contact you.

All $ prices are in USD unless it’s a NZ or AU date

SPVC = Self Paced Virtual Class

LVC = Live Virtual Class

Please Note: All courses are availaible as Live Virtual Classes

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Our clients have included prestigious national organisations such as Oxford University Press, multi-national private corporations such as JP Morgan and HSBC, as well as public sector institutions such as the Department of Defence and the Department of Health.