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Siebel Business Process Designer Administration Guide > Designing Workflow Processes >
Using the Workflow Processes Views
Workflow Processes views are part of the Siebel Business Process Administration interface. Workflow Processes views include:
- All Processes view. For reviewing existing business processes. For more information, see Using the All Processes View.
- Process Designer view. For designing the process flow diagram. For more information, see Using the Process Designer View.
- Process Properties view. For defining the properties for a process. For more information, see Using the Process Properties View.
- Process Simulator view. For testing the functionality of the processes you create. This is similar to a debugging application. For more information, see Using the Process Simulator View.
To access more views, double-click the appropriate step icon in the flowcharted process on the Process Designer view. Views you can access include:
- Business Service view. For defining process steps that call a business service. For more information, see Working with Business Service Steps.
- Decision view. For defining a decision point step, including decision branches, conditions, and values. For more information, see Working with Decision Steps.
- End view. For defining the ending process step. For more information, see End Step Applet Field Descriptions.
- Siebel Operation view. For defining an insert or update to a Siebel database record. For more information, see Working with Siebel Operation Steps.
- Start view. For identifying the conditions that must be met for the process to be initiated. For more information, see Using the Start View.
- Stop view. For defining the input and output arguments that result in a process termination. For more information, see Using the Stop View.
- Subprocess view. For defining subprocess steps, including input and output arguments. For more information, see Working with Subprocess Steps.
- Wait view. For defining a pause in the workflow process execution. For more information, see Working with Wait Steps.
- User Interact view. For defining which view a user is navigated to, and which events to wait for before proceeding to the next step. For more information, see Using the User Interact View.
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Siebel Business Process Designer Administration Guide Published: 29 May 2003 |