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Microsoft Dynamics NAV

You're reading from   Microsoft Dynamics NAV Implementing ERP Systems

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Product type Course
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788298704
Length 1235 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (6):
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David Roys David Roys
Author Profile Icon David Roys
David Roys
Marije Brummel Marije Brummel
Author Profile Icon Marije Brummel
Marije Brummel
Christopher Studebaker Christopher Studebaker
Author Profile Icon Christopher Studebaker
Christopher Studebaker
Cristina Nicolas Lorente Cristina Nicolas Lorente
Author Profile Icon Cristina Nicolas Lorente
Cristina Nicolas Lorente
David Studebaker David Studebaker
Author Profile Icon David Studebaker
David Studebaker
Laura Nicolàs Lorente Laura Nicolàs Lorente
Author Profile Icon Laura Nicolàs Lorente
Laura Nicolàs Lorente
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Toc

Table of Contents (264) Chapters Close

Preface
1. What this learning path covers FREE CHAPTER
2. What you need for this learning path
3. Who this learning path is for
4. Reader feedback
5. Customer support 6. Part 1. Module 1
7. Chapter 1. Exploring Microsoft Dynamics NAV – An Introduction
8. Understanding Microsoft Dynamics NAV
9. The functional areas within Dynamics NAV
10. History of Dynamics NAV
11. Functional areas 12. Accessing Dynamics NAV 13. Summary
14. Chapter 2. What's New in NAV 2016?
15. Application changes 16. Development changes 17. IT changes 18. Summary
19. Chapter 3. Dynamics NAV – General Considerations
20. The data model 21. No save button 22. The posting routines 23. Navigating through your data 24. Real-time data gathering – the SIFT technology
25. Everything leads to accounting
26. The Dynamics NAV database 27. Summary
28. Chapter 4. The Implementation Process – From the Reseller
29. What is an implementation?
30. Methodology 31. Roles 32. Phases 33. Summary
34. Chapter 5. The Implementation Process on the Customer Side
35. Definition of goals
36. Measuring goals
37. Defining the internal processes 38. Improve before automating
39. Getting the requirements
40. Change management
41. Get involved in testing the system
42. Involve end users
43. Summary
44. Chapter 6. Migrating Data
45. Tools to migrate data 46. Converting data from the old system to Dynamics NAV's needs 47. Master data
48. Open entries 49. Historical data
50. Open documents
51. Choosing a go-live date 52. Summary
53. Chapter 7. Upgrading Microsoft Dynamics NAV
54. Upgrading philosophy
55. Upgrades prior to Dynamics NAV 2013
56. Upgrades from Dynamics NAV 2013 forward
57. Upgrading process checklist 58. Upgrading steps to NAV 2013 59. Upgrading tools 60. Summary
61. Chapter 8. Development Considerations
62. Setup versus customization
63. Data model principles 64. The posting process 65. Where to write customized code 66. Formatting customized code
67. Summary
68. Chapter 9. Functional Changes on Existing Implementations
69. General guidelines
70. What is a functional change? 71. Interactions with other functionalities 72. Writing a to-do list to implement a change 73. Choosing the right time 74. Planning the change 75. Summary
76. Chapter 10. Data Analysis and Reporting
77. Using filters and FlowFilters
78. Creating views
79. Statistics
80. Charts 81. Using reports 82. Account schedules
83. Analysis views 84. Extracting data 85. Understanding report development 86. Summary
87. Chapter 11. Debugging
88. The art of debugging
89. Debugging in Dynamics NAV 2016 90. Placing breakpoints 91. Line-by-line execution 92. The Call Stack FactBox
93. The Watches FactBox 94. Summary
95. Chapter 12. Popular Reporting Options with Microsoft Dynamics NAV
96. What is a query?
97. Query Designer 98. Charts
99. Web services 100. Power BI
101. Jet Reports Express 102. Summary
103. Part 2. Module 2
104. Chapter 1. An Introduction to NAV 2015
105. NAV 2015 – an ERP system 106. Significant changes in NAV 2015 107. A developer's overview of NAV 2015 108. Hands-on development in NAV 2015 109. Summary
110. Review questions
111. Chapter 2. Tables
112. An overview of tables 113. Enhancing our sample application 114. Types of tables 115. Summary
116. Review questions
117. Chapter 3. Data Types and Fields
118. Basic definitions
119. Fields 120. Data types 121. FieldClass property options 122. Filtering 123. Summary
124. Review questions
125. Chapter 4. Pages – The Interactive Interface
126. Page design and structure overview 127. Types of pages 128. Page Designer 129. Page components 130. WDTU Page Enhancement – part 1
131. Page controls 132. WDTU Page Enhancement – part 2
133. Page Actions 134. Learning more 135. Summary
136. Review questions
137. Chapter 5. Queries and Reports
138. Queries 139. Reports 140. Report components – overview 141. Report data flow
142. Report components – detail 143. Creating a Report in NAV 2015 144. Summary
145. Review questions
146. Chapter 6. Introduction to C/SIDE and C/AL
147. Understanding C/SIDE 148. C/AL syntax 149. Some simple coding modifications 150. Finishing the processing code 151. Summary
152. Review questions
153. Chapter 7. Intermediate C/AL
154. C/AL Symbol Menu
155. Internal documentation
156. Validation functions 157. Date and Time functions 158. Data conversion and formatting functions 159. FlowField and SumIndexField functions 160. Flow control 161. Input and Output functions 162. Filtering 163. InterObject communication 164. Enhancing the WDTU application 165. Summary
166. Review questions
167. Chapter 8. Advanced NAV Development Tools
168. NAV process flow 169. Role Center pages 170. XMLports 171. Web services 172. Summary
173. Review questions
174. Chapter 9. Successful Conclusions
175. Creating new C/AL routines 176. Multi-language system
177. Multi-currency system
178. Navigate 179. Debugging in NAV 2015 180. C/SIDE Test-driven development
181. Other Interfaces 182. NAV Application Server (NAS)
183. Client Add-ins 184. Customizing Help
185. NAV development projects – general guidance 186. Design for efficiency 187. Updating and upgrading 188. Supporting material
189. Summary
190. Review questions
191. Part 3. Module 3
192. Chapter 1. Introducing Dynamics NAV Patterns and Software Architecture
193. What do we mean by 'patterns'? 194. Microsoft Dynamics NAV Design Patterns 195. Patterns elements and hierarchy 196. Building blocks 197. Metadata 198. Base application 199. Summary
200. Chapter 2. Architectural Patterns
201. The Singleton Pattern 202. The Supplemental and Subsidiary Pattern 203. The Compound Pattern 204. The Rules Pattern 205. The Master Data Pattern 206. The Journal Template-Batch-Line Pattern 207. The Entry Pattern 208. Document Pattern 209. The Argument table 210. Summary
211. Chapter 3. Design Patterns
212. The Entity State Pattern 213. The Select Pattern 214. The Number Series Pattern 215. Address Integration Pattern 216. Multi-Level Setup 217. Document History 218. Copy Document Pattern 219. Job Queue Entry Pattern 220. Dismissible dialogs and save preferences 221. Setup Update Pattern 222. Model-View ViewModel Pattern 223. Summary
224. Chapter 4. Building an Example Application Using Patterns
225. The design elements
226. The Pattern dependencies
227. Step one – Foundation 228. Step two – Master Data 229. Step three – Journals & Entries 230. Step four – Documents 231. The layered model
232. Summary
233. Chapter 5. Coding Best Practices
234. Coding guidelines 235. Class-Method-Property 236. Function libraries and interfaces
237. Natural Language Programming 238. Encapsulation 239. Façade
240. Hooks 241. Variant variables
242. Managing DLL
243. Summary
244. Chapter 6. Anti-patterns and Handling Legacy Code
245. Anti-patterns 246. Legacy code
247. Refactoring the C/AL Code 248. The boy scout rule
249. Summary
250. Chapter 7. Building Solutions Using Patterns
251. Building blocks 252. Creating the Table objects
253. Applying Design Patterns 254. Defining the methods
255. Writing the Code and Link methods 256. Refactoring 257. Testing the application 258. Upgrading the application 259. Building our application 260. Managing the source code 261. Summary
262. Bibliography
263. Index

Summary

In this chapter, we saw that Dynamics NAV offers many configuration options and workarounds that we should use before starting to write our own code. If you need to write customized code, it is important to do it following the same structure as the standard application, to avoid confusing the users. The structures of the tables and the pages are the most important ones, and we've seen them in depth.

The posting process, or posting routines, are the ones in charge of creating historical documents and entries. If you need to modify them, you have to be careful and know what you are doing. That's why we have explained the main idea of posting routines. Last but not least, we saw where and how to write customized code on the Dynamics NAV objects.

In the following chapters, we will see how to implement functional changes on existing and running Dynamics NAV implementations.

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