Just one resource I found interesting: http://workflowpatterns.com/
Em terça-feira, 7 de fevereiro de 2012 23h58min19s UTC-2, mart escreveu: > > Something to think about if effort is put on this (just a suggestion). > You may want to consider the importance of 'roles' in an implemented > wf engine, since user to role interaction should probably be key in a > wf model (or at least as important as having the ability to move work > items around). > > Just my 2 cents, > Mart > > On Feb 7, 5:35 pm, Richard Vézina <ml.richard.vez...@gmail.com> wrote: > > From what I understand you can do just that, but without reinventing the > > wheel by designing and implementing your own solution. > > > > Richard > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > On Tue, Feb 7, 2012 at 5:27 PM, Ross Peoples <ross.peop...@gmail.com> > wrote: > > > I don't know workflow engines in the general sense that well. I once > > > created a full documentation management system where each document > couple > > > have a workflow assigned to it. The workflow (predefined, or created > > > on-the-fly) would push the document around from person to person, > ensuring > > > that each person completed their step in the time allotted, otherwise > an > > > email would get sent to their manager. > > > > > Would a workflow engine allow me to do the same thing, or is this a > > > different type of workflow engine?