| In
the Lab specific intermediate level we continue on with what you've
learned in the standard course by focusing on control structures
and fragments. At this level we focus on examples and reinforcing
the concepts you learned in the standard intermediate course.
That means we are going to be using a real world approach and
focusing on report fragments and control structures. |
1. Replicating Lab Standard Result Reports |
This is
an example where we use standard Magic programs (similar to
report fragments) and line checks to reproduce the result
reports that users see when they run/receive a standard Lab
results report.
|
2.
Turn Around Time Report |
In this
example we look at how to measure the elapsed time between
processing events and do calculations with them.
|
3. Workload Report |
A simple
workload measurement example that uses control structures
to total specimens by collection user as well as total the
number of tests assigned to each specimen.
|
| In
the Lab optional intro level we continue on with what you've learned
in the standard Lab course by focusing on the data structures
that are specific to Blood Bank (BB), Microbiology (MIC) and Pathology
(PTH). |
1. Replicating Standard Result Reports |
This is
a set of examples where we use standard Magic programs (similar
to report fragments) and line checks to reproduce the result
reports that users see when they run/receive a standard results
report. Using report copy and paste we do one for each optional
module (BB, MIC and PTH).
|
2.
Blood Bank Examples:
- Turn
Around Time Report
- Workload Report
|
In keeping
with our real world focus we liberally use copy and pasting
again to re-create the reports we looked at in the standard
lab course. We copy the standard reports across to the optional
modules and tweak each one to function correctly in its new
role.
|
3.
Microbiology Examples:
- Turn
Around Time Report
- Workload Report
|
4. Pathology
Examples:
- Turn
Around Time Report
- Workload Report
|