How to learn Pattern for Discovery and Service Mapping
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
06-20-2022 01:55 PM
Hello Team,
I need some help from you experts , I think I am good in other stuffs in discovery like working on credentials , mid server issues , running discovery, fixing error in discovery troubleshooting and so on .......
But I am facing too much difficulty in understanding patterns thing , how it work , how we can work on custom patterns, how we can create a new pattern from scratch , how to fix the bugs in pattern.
As you guys know pattern is what asked by everyone now a days , even in interview everyone will ask about the patterns
So please help me how I can learn this , where I can practice , is there any source like on demand course or you tube channel (only for pattern ) or any good documents
Please help with your best knowledge you have , its really needed for me to learn this , Please help.
- Labels:
-
Discovery
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
06-21-2022 04:02 AM
Hi Tausif,
You can explore the SNOW docs [explore around this page] for basic learning and utilize the Now Learning Portal to take some basic trainings [Discovery and Service Mapping Fundamentals] on understanding and develop patterns. Now learning has simulated labs too if I'm not wrong.
You can skip other modules as part of those trainings and concentrate on the pattern areas for faster pace.
Once you complete these and along with any short you tube videos if needed you should be able to understand the semantics of patterns and you can start exploring OOB patterns and tweak them to check your learnings. You can get the short lived dev instances for these learnings.
Of course community also helps you learn many things, you can subscribe to ITOM channels and go through pattern related queries and see how people solving the real time problems.
I believe this should be the basic approach to go for now.
Please mark Helpful / Accept Solution so that it helps others with similar questions.
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
06-21-2022 09:19 AM