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    « What does the lock icon mean in SSMS when looking at a stored procedure?SQL University – Performance Week »
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    One of my new friends that I was fortunate to make while attending the MVP Summit, Dan English (Twitter | Blog | MVP), mentioned last night something that hit home pretty hard and fast.  I was writing an SSIS package to go along with one of my SQL University posts and posted an image of my first initial execution of the package.  See, all of the boxes were green on that first try and it’s always a smile when you get all green boxes on your first run.  But what if you can’t see the color green?

    Dan’s reply to my tweet:

    This is something I had never considered and I will be very honest in saying that.  After reading this tweet, it hit me that I really should have thought about this a long time ago and been very proactive about it. 

    What Dan mentions in the tweet is the labels we can turn on for precedence constraints.  He also has a great blog that goes over this, “Integration Services (SSIS) Package Designing Tips”.  I realize just how important this is so I’m going to put it up here as well.

    Simply stated; turning precedence labels on will show precedence as success, failure and completion will be written next to the precedence connections.  (See below)

    So set this option on go to Tools a Options and select Business Intelligence Designers.  Tick the Accessibility option for “Show precedence constraints labels.

    Now when the package executes, the tasks that run and the flow will be easier to distinguish when green or red may not be accessible. 

    From Dan’s blog there is also mention of naming your objects in SSIS with something meaningful.  I’m guilty in some of my blogs and articles where I have not done this.  I would like to say I could just go with the saying, “Do what I say, not what I do”.  But I won’t.  In the packages you write for work, presentations, blogs, articles or even a funny image you tweet on twitter; make sure you name them appropriately so it makes sense when someone looks at it. 

    I also suggest changing the objects so the text is bold for presentation purposes along with the use of ZoomIt.

    Thanks goes to Dan for bringing this up and making me a better presenter from it.

    About the Author

    Ted Krueger is a SQL Server MVP and has been working in development and database administration for 13+ years. Specialties range from High Availability and Disaster / Recovery setup and testing methods down to custom assembly development for SQL Server Reporting Services. Ted blogs and is also one of the founders of LessThanDot.com technology community. Some of the articles focused on are Backup / Recovery, Security, SSIS and working on SQL Server and using all of the SQL Server features available to create stable and scalable database services. @onpnt Personal Blog over at http://onpnt.wordpress.com/
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    5 comments

    Comment from: Christiaan Baes (chrissie1) [Member]
    Christiaan Baes (chrissie1) I highly recommend you read my blogs for once.

    http://blogs.lessthandot.com/index.php/WebDev/UIDevelopment/design-for-colour-blindness you can use the same tool to see if your pictures are readable for the colourblind.
    04/06/11 @ 07:12
    Comment from: SQLDenis [Member] Email
    SQLDenis Good advice...projectors will of course make the problem worse..remember the summit?



    This is also why Facebook is the color blue, Mark Zuckerberg is color vision deficient.


    The reason Facebook is blue: Zuckerberg is colorblind

    According to The New Yorker, Zuckerberg is red-green colorblind, which means the color he can see best is blue. That also happens to be the color that dominates the Facebook website and mobile app.

    "Blue is the richest color for me," he told the magazine. "I can see all of blue."
    04/06/11 @ 07:14
    Comment from: Dan English [Visitor] · http://denglishbi.wordpress.com
    Dan English The other thing that is helpful for documentation, especially if you are using expressions in precedence constraints is to enable 'ConstraintOptions' on the ShowAnnotations property of the constraint. I would also recommend some sort of naming convention prefix on all components you add in the package to help when it comes to troubleshoot information in the logs so you know the type of component that failed (http://consultingblogs.emc.com/jamiethomson/archive/2006/01/05/SSIS_3A00_-Suggested-Best-Practices-and-naming-conventions.aspx).
    04/06/11 @ 07:35
    Comment from: Ted Krueger (onpnt) [Member]
    Ted Krueger (onpnt) Awesome. Thanks, Dan!
    04/06/11 @ 07:41
    Comment from: Alan Whitehouse [Visitor] · http://alanwhitehouse.wordpress.com
    Alan Whitehouse Don't forget about screen resolution as well. What works on your computer when you are developing a presentation may show horribly on a projector when you are forced down to 1024x768 resolution.
    04/06/11 @ 17:46

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