Your third step is to indicate where the documents are created, processed, and used. This is probably the most difficult task, and a document flowchart designer must often use considerable ingenuity to represent data flows and processing activities accurately. Figure 3-4 illustrates these flows for the hiring procedures just described.
Where there are a large number of document transmittals, you can use on-page connectors (circles) to connect document flows from one place on a page to another and avoid complicated flow lines. Thus, Figure 3-4 uses several on-page connectors (with letters A, B, and C) to avoid cluttering the drawing and shows the completed document flowchart. You should use a unique identifier in each connector (such as a letter) for identification
purposes. You can also use off-page connectors (to connect data flows to other pages) if necessary.
Your third step is to indicate where the documents are created, processed, and used. This is probably the most difficult task, and a document flowchart designer must often use considerable ingenuity to represent data flows and processing activities accurately. Figure 3-4 illustrates these flows for the hiring procedures just described.
Where there are a large number of document transmittals, you can use on-page connectors (circles) to connect document flows from one place on a page to another and avoid complicated flow lines. Thus, Figure 3-4 uses several on-page connectors (with letters A, B, and C) to avoid cluttering the drawing and shows the completed document flowchart. You should use a unique identifier in each connector (such as a letter) for identification
purposes. You can also use off-page connectors (to connect data flows to other pages) if necessary.
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