Lists are lists of keywords or tags. A Lists' primary usage is to serve for tagging content.
A list is your controlled vocabulary, your taxonomy which is used for tagging with multi-dimensional information. That means a list can only have a list of tags with a name, or a list of tags that have further information like synonyms, translations, broader terms, narrower terms etc.
A list in Picturepark can also be linked to other lists which then enriches the tag as all information from linked lists travels with the tag e.g. a person "John Doe" tagged with department "Marketing" has all additional information about the marketing department like goals, manager, other team members).
Create a List
Create a List
Open Schemas
Press + to create
Select the Parent List for the creation of a child list.
Provide Name and ID
Save
After Creating the List
Add Default Values for List Items
Add Default Values for Tagbox on a List
For tagboxes on the list items, you can define default values that will be added to newly created list items in this tagbox.
Use List Items to Tag your Content
Use List Items to Tag your Content
Now the tricky part begins. To use the tags on the content you must have a tagbox that shows the List Items as tags.
Picturepark setup:
You can tag your content in edit mode:
Edit one or multiple content items (single or batch-edit work)
Choose your tagbox field
On focus, the field will show suggestions
Suggestions use the Display Pattern List.
Suggestions consider the Tagbox filter (the list may have more items than are available here)
Start typing to have suggestions adapt to your input (or scroll through)
Either select the suggested value or create new (requires permission)
Create new will open a new window that allows adding List Items to the connected List while editing your content. The default values of the Tagbox are automatically prefilled.
Attention: the Tagbox filter may prevent you from using your new tag directly.
Save
Tagging in Picturepark vs. Tagging in Twitter
The differences to other tagging options you might know are:
You can define additional attributes per tag e.g. tag "Product Content Platform" can have attributes: name, description, editions, markets, customers, references and price.
You can have permissions for accessing lists to restrict access to product codes for design agency users.
You can have permissions for adding or using list items (aka tags) - so you can restrict the addition of new products by a reseller user.
You can have multiple lists, with different key terms and attributes, for better control and organization.
You can reference Lists in Lists e.g. List Item "Ramon Forster" is referenced in List Item "Picturepark" in the attribute "CEO" and the List Item "Picturepark" is referenced in "Ramon Forster" (cyclic dependencies).
The art of organizing lists and prepare proper classifications is information architecture, which comes up with great taxonomies and classifications.