Book Image

Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV - Third Edition

By : Alex Chow
Book Image

Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV - Third Edition

By: Alex Chow

Overview of this book

Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2016 is an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) application used in all kinds of organizations around the world. It provides a great variety of functionality out-of-the-box in different topics such as accounting, sales, purchase processing, logistics, or manufacturing. It also allows companies to grow the application by customizing the solution to meet specific requirements. This book is a hands-on tutorial on working with a real Dynamics NAV implementation. You will learn about the team from your Microsoft Dynamics NAV partner as well as the team within the customer’s company. This book provides an insight into the different tools available to migrate data from the client’s legacy system into Microsoft Dynamics NAV. If you are already live with Microsoft Dynamics NAV, this books talks about upgrades and what to expect from them. We’ll also show you how to implement additional or expanding functionalities within your existing Microsoft Dynamics NAV installation, perform data analysis, debug error messages, and implement free third-party add-ons to your existing installation. This book will empower you with all the skills and knowledge you need for a successful implementation.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV Third Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Upgrades from Dynamics NAV 2013 forward


With the release of Dynamics NAV 2015, Microsoft introduced the PowerShell upgrade that automates the code merging as well as the data upgrade. In order to take advantage of the PowerShell upgrade process, you need to be at least on Dynamics NAV 2013.

There are some limitations to the automated upgrade. This is listed on MSDN at https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/mt600251(v=nav.90).aspx.

Basically, what it says is the following:

  • If the names of your old variables are used in the newer version as a function or statement, you must change them before you upgrade

  • If your old code calls functions that do not exist anymore in the newer version, you must verify that the upgrade codeunits migrate data correctly

  • If the code you're coming from causes some fields on the table to be dropped, you'll need to make sure that it doesn't

  • If your company name uses special reserved characters in NAV, such as [ ~ @ # $ % & * ( ) . ! % - + / = ? ], then rename the company...