New Member Introduction - Seeking Guidance and Tips
Hi Everyone,
I am eager to join the Ninox community. My name is Mitchel and I am form USA. I am looking forward to exploring this forum and getting more familiar with Ninox. I am new to the platform and anxious to jump in, so any tips or direction would be enormously valuable.
In particular, I would like to know where to go to get help with various Ninox-related issues and ask technical questions.
I am expecting to associate with different individuals, share encounters and contribute where I can.
Much obliged to you ahead of time for your assistance and I look forward to engaging with all of you.
With Regards,
Mitchel
7 replies
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Welcome Mitchel.
You can get help here in the forums.
There is an official Ninox FB page, but support is provided by other users.
If you have a Pro account with Ninox you can email them.
A Ninox partner, Nioxus, provides support, free weekly training webinars, templates, and hosting services all for a price.
Both Ninox and Nioxus have a Youtube page with lots of good videos.
Good luck.
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You don't mention if you have previous relational DB experience. If you come from the spreadsheet world, I would say that understanding and getting comfortable with relationships is very important.
One example of this is when you find yourself wanting to create multiple fields that store the same type of data, like cost or phone number or address or worker, and you find your self adding a 1 or 2 at the end of the field name.
You have a job record and you want to store the workers assigned to the job. You would be tempted to create worker1 and worker2 and worker3.
or
You have a contact table and store phone numbers, so you create mobile1 and mobile2, or even work, home, fax.
or
You have a project record and you have duedate1, duedate2, duedate3.
One reason not to do it this way is what happens if you only have 1 worker? Now you have two empty slots. What if you have a job with 10 workers? Now you have to go back and add 7 more slots and now all of your records have these empty slots.
The way to do this in a relational DB is to create a new table that you then link. Now you can store one instance of the data, or two, or twenty, or one hundred.
Another reason is trying to find anything amongst all these fields is a nightmare.
If you want to find a worker that worked on a job you have write code that searches each field for the worker. Then you have to update the code if you added more fields.
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Hi Mitchel
Welcome to our forum.You will be made to feel more than welcome here, as I was. No question is too big or small.
Kind regards
John
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A warm welcome from me as well
Content aside
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