Edit Work Item Templates in Visual Studio Teamservices? - tfs-workitem

Is it possible to edit the Work Item Templates (former TFS Online) in Visual Studio Team Services?
I haven't found anything yet during my research. I tried the Powertools, unfortunately it says "access denied".

Yes, you can create a new Process Template inherited from an existing one, then add customisations to that.
The easiest way to get started is to open a Work Item and click on the "..." on the top right and select Customize:
There are lots of details I have found via the documentation on visualstudio.com - here or on this blog post.

Related

Where can I locate quick preview file or rather how to hide quick preview in vtiger crm 7.1.0?

I tried checking over the world of internet on how can I hide quick preview or edit the content of quick preview but to no luck I can't seem to find any answer nor a question about quick preview. Even I tried searching the files inside vtiger but can't seem to find any clue to where I can locate it and since there are too many files inside. Can anyone help me?
By the way I'm using Vtiger CRM 7.1.0
After a thorough checking on the folders inside vtigercrm I was able to successfully hide quick preview though when I found out how to hide it I didn't went on searching how I can edit the content of quick preview.
This is how to do it:
go to /var/www/html/vtigercrm_maxicare/modules/Vtiger/views
and edit List.php
Comment out this line
$viewer->assign('QUICK_PREVIEW_ENABLED', 'true');
Or you can just comment out the entire condition
$moduleModel = Vtiger_Module_Model::getInstance($moduleName);
if($moduleModel->isQuickPreviewEnabled()){
$viewer->assign('QUICK_PREVIEW_ENABLED', 'true');
}

Can I change the "redmine" interface elements with "visual studio" or another system?

I use
Visual Studio 2015
Can I change the "redmine" interface elements with "visual studio" or another system?
For example, for the "task creation form" I want to add "buttons" or additional "tab bar".
Can this be done by analogy with working with "Windows Form"?
I mean drag the button onto the form and add the code for the button.
PS
I start to study programming, I apologize if the question is inaccurate
To change Redmine UI, and add/remove new features, you would have to learn html/css, ruby, and Ruby on Rails framework.
Once you learn them, best way to modify Redmine is by making plugin which adds functionality you want, and preferably share that plugin with others via github and redmine's plugin registry listed here: www.redmine.org/plugins
In that sense, you can use Visual Studio, as code editor, or any other text editor, as long as they have nice syntax coloring, code indenting, and preferably function and variable name completion...

Flatten inherited members in Visual Studio's Watch window in C++?

This question is the same as this one, except that I'm debugging a C++ application. For the original question, a C# debugger has this functionality out-of-the-box now. Also, third-party tools for it exist.
Is there a way to achieve the same for C++? I'm currently using Visual Studio 2015.
EDIT 1
The classes in question are subject to change which limits use of Visual Studio's native Debugger Visualizers (natvis) feature. As far as I understand the custom visualizer will have to be modified every time the debugged class is changed, so that's not an option, regretfully.
Not find the third party tool or extension tool for VC++ directly in VS IDE, but I know that we could create custom view for VC++:
Reference:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/jj620914.aspx
It would be a workaround if you want to custom the debug watch view.
Update:
No other extension tool, but I help you submit a feature request to the product team here:
https://visualstudio.uservoice.com/forums/121579-visual-studio-ide/suggestions/18574198-flatten-inherited-members-in-visual-studio-s-watch
If possible, you could add your comment and vote it.

how to remove yourself from a Watson Studio (formerly DSX) project?

It is possible for users to add you to a Watson Studio project, however, after a while you can end up belonging to a lot of other projects.
How can you remove yourself from another project? Is it possible to do this, or do you need to contact the project owner and ask them to remove you?
See also: https://datascix.uservoice.com/forums/387207-general/suggestions/17738392-allow-me-to-leave-a-project
It is not possible at the moment. You already did the right thing by raising an uservoice suggestion. I am going to upvote :)
Update: This is possible since some time now. Go to the list of projects and click on the 3 dot menu --> Leave Project

Adding a custom "template group" in Word 2013

Is it possible to add a custom template "tab" (for lack of a better term) to the start screen in Word 2013? In other words, is it possible to add another section in addition to "Featured" and "Personal?" in the interface below?
I'm interested in the feasibility of adding a, say, "Legal" tab, to surface templates developed specifically for an organization's legal department. I'm aware that a custom template directory can be pushed down via domain policy (read: registry edit) such that custom templates appear under the "Personal" tab, but that's not really ideal given the administrative overhead. Not to mention that the templates aren't "personal" at all.
Ideally, I'd like to accomplish this via an Office app. Looking at the JavaScript API for Office documentation, however, it doesn't seem immediately possible.
This post (via this SO question) describes the registry change and seems to suggest that customizing the "backstage" isn't possible.
Is such a customization possible? If so, via what means of customization? Using an Office add-in (managed), an Office app, some other registry modification...?
(And yes, I'm aware that "add-in" is the new term; for the sake of clarity I use the term "add-in" in the question to refer to the managed add-in project template available in Visual Studio 2013 as opposed to the Office app or Cloud app for Office templates)
You won't be able to add a custom group to the available template using the JavaScript-based Office Add-ins (This technology is rather limited in functionality - it's main advantage is that it can run cross-platform).
The approach to add custom templates is to create a Spotlight provider. It is described in detail here:
Deploy custom templates in Office 2010
The article talks about Office 2010, but it works also in Office 2013. You only would need to change the version number in the Registry Keys from 14.0 to 15.0.
Yes, I believe implementing a Backstage tab is possible by creating a Word 2013 VSTO add-in using Visual Studio 2013. (This is also possible by embedding Ribbon XML into a VBA add-in template that loads on start up as well.)
I will preface the course of action I outline below by saying that I think it would be easier and possibly provide a better UI experience to create a custom Legal ribbon tab with a gallery control populated by images of the templates. (A Custom Task Pane might also provide a good solution, depending on the use cases.)
Preparing Word
The screen capture you provided is the initial Backstage view that appears when Word 2013 is launched. (This view only appears at launch and future access to templates using this Word instance will need to be via the Backstage New tab.) As this Backstage "splash screen" cannot, to my knowledge, be modified, the first step is to disable it by going to File|Options|General|Startup Options and uncheck Show the Start screen when this application starts. This will cause Word to launch to a blank document and remove this splash screen permanently. And this setting can be pushed down to users PCs via group policy. (If you disabled this setting and then went the custom Ribbon tab route, you could have your templates displayed visually in the ribbon upon launch.)
The Approach
With the Backstage "splash screen" disabled, I suggest hiding the built-in Backstage New tab and then replacing it with a custom New tab that features your legal templates.
The Word Backstage view is altered via Ribbon XML code. This code is either embedded in a VBA template add-in or delivered via a VSTO add-in built in Visual Studio with C#, F#, or VB.NET. To hide the built-in New tab, the XML would contain this code:
<tab idMso="TabOfficeStart" visible="false"/>
You can find all the control identifiers here:
Office 2013 Fluent User Interface Control Identifiers
The Steps
Create the add-in project in Visual Studio (or the template in VBA)
Write the Ribbon XML which will remove the New tab and insert your custom tab with legal templates
Customizing the Office 2010 Backstage View for Developers (Applies to Office 2013 As Well)
Create Custom Tabs in the Office 2010 Backstage View (Applies to Office 2013 As Well)
Deploy the add-in
This should get you started, but you may need to seek out other articles on add-in creation and Backstage customizations.