Book Image

Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 Programming Cookbook

By : Matthew Traxinger
Book Image

Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 Programming Cookbook

By: Matthew Traxinger

Overview of this book

Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 is a business management solution that helps simplify and streamline highly specialized business processes such as finance, manufacturing, customer relationship management, supply chains, analytics, and electronic commerce for small and medium-sized enterprises. ERP systems like NAV thus become the center of a company's day-to-day operations. When you learn to program in an environment like this it opens up doors to many other exciting areas like .NET programming, SQL Server, and Web Services.Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 Programming Cookbook will take you through interesting topics that span a wide range of areas such as integrating the NAV system with other software applications like Microsoft Office, creating reports to present information from multiple areas of the system, and so on. You will not only learn the basics of NAV programming, but you will also be exposed to the technologies that surround the NAV system such as .NET programming, SQL Server, and Web Services.The first half of the cookbook will help programmers coming to NAV for the first time by walking them through the building blocks of writing code and creating objects like tables, forms, and reports. The second half focuses on using the technologies surrounding NAV to build better solutions. You will learn how to write .NET code that works with the NAV system and how to integrate the system with other software applications like Microsoft Office or even custom programs. You will also discover some of the features of the Role Tailored Client including creating Pages and custom add-ins.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 Programming Cookbook
Credits
About the author
About the reviewer
Preface
Index

Introduction


Microsoft Dynamics NAV does a lot of things really well. It has areas for sales, purchases, inventory, manufacturing, and financials just to name a few. It has the ability to do just about anything a company needs it to do, but that doesn't mean it will.

Businesses rely on multiple applications to run their operations. In the past, most of these applications have been housed on-site on the company's own servers. Integration between them was limited to flat file exchange or talking directly to the other database. Over the past few years there has been a major paradigm shift from the traditional client-server architecture towards a hosted model, often referred to as The Cloud. With the introduction of Web Services in NAV 2009, Microsoft has made sure that Dynamics NAV will continue to meet its customers' integration needs for this new type of infrastructure.

In this chapter, we will go over the old and the new. We will discuss how to do simple integrations using text and XML files...