Book Image

Getting Started with Dynamics NAV 2013 Application Development

By : Alex Chow
Book Image

Getting Started with Dynamics NAV 2013 Application Development

By: Alex Chow

Overview of this book

So, your company has made the wise decision to use Dynamics NAV as its main business software for all its enterprise resource planning. Dive in and learn the ins and outs of the software from a development standpoint and unlock the software's full potential.The book will walk you through creating an application from start to finish. Once you know how to create a working application that users can access, you will have the knowledge and the resources needed to create other applications based on the tutorials covered in this guide.You will start by obtaining a free trial version of Dynamics NAV and then be introduced to the world of analyzing and deriving user problems into a requirements list. Finally, you will be shown how to use the software to knock out these requirements. You will learn everything you need in order to begin creating your own applications, from translating the user's requirements to creating and modifying your system applications. Use Dynamics NAV's capability to create an application and address the user's needs, while also learning best practices and simple solutions. "Getting Started with Dynamics NAV 2013 Application Development" will help you on your way to becoming a great developer!
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Getting Started with Dynamics NAV 2013 Application Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

A closer look at the requirements


Almost everything you see when you start up Dynamics NAV resides in what we NAV people call objects. To access these objects, go ahead and run the Microsoft Dynamics NAV Development Environment and then start up the Object Designer by clicking on Tools | Object Designer if it's not already open. As described in Chapter 2, Getting Familiar with Dynamics NAV, there are seven types of programming objects in Dynamics NAV. In this section, we will be focusing on tables. Without tables, there wouldn't be a place to hold our data.

When creating any new functions or modules in NAV, we always start from the tables. The table is the foundation, as all pages and reports that the users will interact with will be based on a table or multiple tables.

In addition, most of the business validation and rules will be programmed in tables. Why? One of the main reasons is if you put the validation and business rules on the pages, then you would need to replicate that code across...