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Behavior | VIDEO: How Relationship Behaves You select Content Items based on the Query Filter of the Field. On assignment, you must provide information about the relationship between the assigned and the original content. The underlying relationship schema defines which relationship information you must provide. | ||||
Pre-Requirement | Before creating a Relationship Field, you must create the schema used for providing information about the relationship. This schema shows up when assigning a Content Item in this field. | ||||
Parent-Child Setup | You can create a schema "Relationship" following a parent-child setup. When you connect your Relationship schema to the Relationship field, the parent-child hierarchy is ignored. If you connect the Relationship field to a parent, you will only see fields on the parent. If you connect the Relationship field to a child, you will only see fields on the child, no propagated fields from the parent. | ||||
Batch Actions:
| Related content items can be downloaded all together or placed all together in the basket for further processing, e.g., editing or sharing. Additionally, each individual item can be downloaded directly or added to the basket. | ||||
Limitation | Relationship Fields are not available in Batch Editor! You can not edit a single or multi relationship in the Batch Editor batch edit mode (only in single edit), nor Excel Roundtripping App. You can easily edit them via API. Furthermore, Content Items or List Items cannot be sorted based on Relationship fields. | ||||
Display pattern | Picturepark does not use the Display Pattern on the Relationship Schema. All relationship information in the view mode of a Content Item is hard-coded and does not consider Display Patterns. | ||||
Single Relationship | One item can be related. Examples are:
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Multi Relationship | Multiple items can be related. Examples are:
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Display & Handling | The relationship field items are displayed as a list or thumbnails small or medium. The elements can be re-arranged if you have edit permissions on the Content Item and view permissions on the related Content Items. | ||||
Permissions | Inside a relationship field, the Content Item permissions apply. For example, if you have a user who cannot view a Content Item in a relationship field, they will get this view: However, double-clicking on that field will allow them to view the relationship details - when the layer is visible thanks to the "view View for all" permission on for the relationship schema. | ||||
Examples | On a Content item for a product, you might have a Relationship field for product photos. In your relationship schema for this field, you might have a single field for "View" that is, in turn, assigned to a List that provides the values Front, Top, and Side values. When a user relates a photo to the product Content Item, the field for "View" would will appear, enabling the user to define the context of the related image. When the Content Item was published, this contextual information would be available.
Another valid approach is to use the Relationship field to relate creative files. Whether you are linking the zip package or individual files is up to you.
In addition, your relationship schema could include fields for Caption or any other context information about the related content. |
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