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Guidewire ClaimCenter-Business-Analysts Exam - Topic 2 Question 7 Discussion

Actual exam question for Guidewire's ClaimCenter-Business-Analysts exam
Question #: 7
Topic #: 2
[All ClaimCenter-Business-Analysts Questions]

To help manage new user setup, Succeed Insurance would like all manager-level employees to be able to add new users to ClaimCenter. Some managers are already assigned the Community Admin role, which has a set of permissions for the administration of the ClaimCenter community model that includes the permission to create new users.

Where are two places the Business Analyst (BA) can go to view the permissions assigned to manager-level users? (Choose two.)

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Suggested Answer: B, E

To view the detailed System Permissions (such as usercreate, claimview, etc.) associated with a specific user role (like 'Manager' or 'Community Admin'), a Business Analyst has two primary methods: one within the application UI and one via generated documentation.

Administration Menu > Users & Security > Roles (Option E): This is the direct User Interface method. By navigating to the Roles page in the Administration tab, the BA can select a specific role (e.g., 'Manager'). The detailed view of that role lists every system permission currently granted to it. This allows the BA to verify if the 'usercreate' permission is present.

Security Dictionary (Option B): For a comprehensive, searchable, and offline reference, the BA can access the Security Dictionary. This is a set of HTML files generated from the application's configuration (found in the build directory). It provides a complete matrix of all Roles, the Permissions assigned to them, and the Access Profiles configured in the system.

Why other options are incorrect:

Data Dictionary (A): This documents the Data Model (Entities and Typelists), not the security configuration.

Users (C): While this screen lists users and their assigned roles, it does not display the definitions (the specific list of permissions) of those roles.

Authority Limits (D): This screen manages Financial limits (dollar amounts for reserves/payments), not system access permissions.


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Honey
4 days ago
I think the Security Dictionary is definitely one of the places to check for permissions, but I'm not sure about the second option.
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