You are here: Designer Studio > Managing your records > Components of a ruleform

Parts of rule and data forms

Forms for rule and data instance records contain important information, controls, and visual cues.

Form header

All records display a header at the top of the form. There are four main components.

Form actions

The right side of the form header displays a toolbar that contains a row of buttons that enable you to perform tasks such as saving, deleting, creating, and checking out records.

For a description, see Rule and data form toolbar.

Form details

The top left portion of each form includes the form name, a mode icon, and the key parts of the specific record.

 

Data instances display a subset of details available to rules, with the addition of Associated RuleSet.

 

Mode

Indicates whether this form contains a locked (read-only) instance.

  • The Edit label appears if this rule was locked or checked out using the Check out or Check out to branch buttons.
  • The Private Edit label appears if the rule was checked out using the Private edit button. This label also appears for all data instance forms.
  • A f form has no label when its record is read-only. Examples include: rules in a locked ruleset version; rules checked out by another operator, rules in a class you cannot update, and rules in an unlocked ruleset that are not checked out by you. The Check out(or Private edit) and Save As buttons appear on the toolbar.

The mode automatically updates as the form changes states; you cannot edit it directly in the form header.

See Rule and data form toolbar.

Type

A common name associated with a rule or data instance based on object class. For example, rules of class Rule-Obj-Flow have type “flow”. Data instances of class Data-Admin-Operator-ID have type “Operator ID”.

See Rules by form name and Data classes by form name for the complete lists.

Short Description

Contains the required Short Description field. It aids other developers in identifying the purpose and source of this instance. To edit the name, click it and modify the text in the pop-up dialog. Click OK to save your edits.

Note: For flows, flow actions, application rules, and certain class rule instances, the text you enter here may be visible to users of your application. See Creating good Short Descriptions.

Availability

Displays this record's availability. To change the setting, click the label to open the pop-up dialog. Make your selection in the Availability drop-down menu and click OK. See available rule and Changing rule availability.

Status

Appears if the record has a status setting. To change the setting, click the label. In the pop-up dialog, make your selection in the Status drop-down menu and click OK.

As a best practice, leave the Status field blank except in special situations. Select:

  • API — Select API to associate this rule with one of Pega's interfaces. Select an interface. (Traditionally, this designation indicates an intent not to change the functionality of the rule in future releases.)
  • Template — Select Template to mark this rule as a template, to appear in the Template field. This is useful for harness and flows. (See step 4 above)
  • Extension — Select Extension to mark this rule as an extension point of a framework, to be overridden in each implementation of the framework. Extensions are specified by framework developers for rules that are intended to be overwritten or copied down to the implementation class. Select > Applications > Inventory > Extension Points to view rules with this status.

Note: The value you select for this property (Rule-.pyMethodStatus) does not affect validation, execution, record resolution, or migration of the record.

Circumstance Definition

A circumstanced rule is a variant or specialized version of a base rule.

The Circumstanced label appears if the record is circumstanced by property, date, or date range. To see the circumstance values, click the label.

For a description of the settings, see Completing the Specialization form.

This label is also displayed on the base version of the record. When you click the label, the This is a base version pop-up message appears.

Key parts

Key parts are human readable portions of a record’s pzInskey, such as pyClassName (applies to class) and pyRuleName (name of record). They are always visible in the header for quick reference.

You cannot alter the value of record key parts directly on the form. You determine key parts in the Create, Save As, or Specialization forms. See:

Ruleset and version

Identifies the ruleset and version that apply to this record. Records in rule set names beginning with the five characters Pega- are reserved and locked. Click the link to open the ruleset.

  • If this record is in a branched rule set, the base rule set and branch name appear in this area. See Branches and Branch RuleSets. Click the name to open the branch rule set.
  • If this is a data instance or application rule, the associated rule set and Edit link appear in this area. If there is no rule set specified, the field displays No Associated RuleSet. Click Edit to change or add a rule set.

Form tabs

Click any tab to bring it to the front. (Some users can access only the left tab of certain forms.)

History tab

Every form has a History tab. It can contain a text description of the record and shows who created and updated it and when. In some cases, you can roll back a record to an earlier version. Here you can also specify custom fields for the current record.

Pages and Classes tab

Many forms contain a Pages & Classes tab. See Completing a Pages & Classes tab.

Other tabs

Other tabs vary by form. Consult the help topics for information on specific tabs and fields.

Related Topics IconRelated information