Dynamics GP has a rather interesting and sometimes challenging table naming structure. When developers or consultants first see this, they are overwhelmed to say the least. Because Dynamics GP is actually a collection of modules, some of which were developed by outside organizations and later assimilated into the core product, we will find that even the standard table naming and numbering do not always apply depending on which module contains the data we need. Nevertheless, by learning the standard structure and naming convention of the core modules, we will notice that it does make some sense. With this knowledge in hand, as well as some of the resources we will cover later in this chapter, we will even have a head start on understanding where data resides in tables underlying non-core GP modules that might not follow the standard naming convention.
Microsoft Dynamics GP 2013 Reporting - Second Edition
Microsoft Dynamics GP 2013 Reporting - Second Edition
Overview of this book
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Microsoft Dynamics GP 2013 Reporting
Credits
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Acknowledgments
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Free Chapter
Meeting the Reporting Challenge
Where Is My Data and How Do I Get to It?
Working with the Builders – SmartList and Excel Reports
Report Writer and Word Templates
Utilizing the SSRS Report Library
Designing Your Analysis Cubes for the Excel Environment
Utilizing Analysis Cubes for Excel for Dynamic Reporting
Designing Financial Reports in Management Reporter
Viewing Financial Reports in Management Reporter
Bringing it all Together
Comparing the Dynamics GP Reporting Tools Against Different Reporting Challenges
Index
Customer Reviews