<aside> šŸš© Each team will have a Google Drive folder that will be shared with the team members, the instructors, and their TA.

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Organizing your Documents

By Week 3, teams will have been formed, and a Google Drive folder will have been created for each team. You will find the folder in theĀ Shared with meĀ area of your Ryerson Google Drive.

All studentsĀ mustĀ use only their Ryerson accounts for accessing the Team shared folder. Anyone found to have shared the folder with an account outside the team will beĀ charged with academic misconduct.

During theĀ kickoff meeting, check to make sure that you have access to your team's shared folder.

You will keep all ā€œdeliverableā€ files and documents in the shared drive. Only documents in the shared folder will be considered for grading the team project, unless specified otherwise by the instructors.

Many deliverables are based on templates created for the course. To make a copy of an instructor-provided template, open the Google Doc template, and useĀ File > Make a copy. Files and folders placed in your teamā€™s shared Google Drive will be visible automatically to all members of your team, your TA, and the instructors.

Linking between Documents

You will have various reasons to create links between your Google Docs.

Sometimes it will make sense to simply link to the document as a whole. However, most of the time, you will need to link to specific sections of a Google Doc.

Precise, specific linking between documents is considered a requirement for a successful project.

Google has documentation for this feature at https://support.google.com/docs/answer/45893.

For instance, if you refer to a specific Requirement in the specification of a System Interface, then you should link directly to the specific Requirement - not to the whole Product Requirements Specification.


<aside> šŸ’” Except where otherwise noted, content on this wiki is licensed under the following license:Ā CC Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 4.0 International.

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