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Programming Microsoft Dynamics NAV

You're reading from   Programming Microsoft Dynamics NAV Hone your skills and increase your productivity when programming in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2017

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786468192
Length 706 pages
Edition 5th Edition
Languages
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Authors (3):
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Marije Brummel Marije Brummel
Author Profile Icon Marije Brummel
Marije Brummel
David Studebaker David Studebaker
Author Profile Icon David Studebaker
David Studebaker
Christopher D. Studebaker Christopher D. Studebaker
Author Profile Icon Christopher D. Studebaker
Christopher D. Studebaker
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to NAV 2017 2. Tables FREE CHAPTER 3. Data Types and Fields 4. Pages - the Interactive Interface 5. Queries and Reports 6. Introduction to C/SIDE and C/AL 7. Intermediate C/AL 8. Advanced NAV Development Tools 9. Successful Conclusions

Multi-user Navigator

In 1987, PC & C released a new product, the multi-user Navigator, and a new corporate name, Navision. Navigator was quite a technological leap forward. It included the following:

  • Client/Server technology
  • Relational database
  • Transaction-based processing
  • Version management
  • High-speed OLAP capabilities (SIFT technology)
  • A screen painter tool
  • A programmable report writer

In 1990, Navision was expanding its marketing and dealer recruitment efforts into Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom. Also in 1990, V3 of Navigator was released. Navigator V3 was still a character-based system, albeit a very sophisticated one. If you had an opportunity to study Navigator V3.x, you would instantly recognize the roots of today's NAV product. By V3, the product included:

  • A design based on object-oriented concepts
  • Integrated 4GL Table, Form, and Report Design tools (the IDE)
  • Structured exception handling
  • Built-in resource management
  • The original programming language that became C/AL
  • Function libraries
  • The concept of regional or country-based localization

When Navigator V3.5 was released, it also included support for multiple platforms and multiple databases. Navigator V3.5 would run on both Unix and Windows NT networks. It supported Oracle and Informix databases as well as the one developed in-house.

At about this time, several major strategic efforts were initiated. On the technical side, the decision was made to develop a GUI-based product. The first prototype of Navision Financials (for Windows) was shown in 1992. At about the same time, a relationship was established that would take Navision into distribution in the United States. The initial release in the US in 1995 was V3.5 of the character-based product, rechristened Avista for US distribution.

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