Book Image

SAP ABAP Advanced Cookbook

By : Rehan Zaidi
Book Image

SAP ABAP Advanced Cookbook

By: Rehan Zaidi

Overview of this book

ABAP (Advanced Business Application Programming) is SAP's proprietary 4th Generation Language (4GL). SAP core is written almost entirely in ABAP.ABAP is a high level programming language used in SAP for development and other customization processes."SAP ABAP Advanced Cookbook"ù covers advanced SAP programming applications with ABAP. It teaches you to enhance SAP applications by developing custom reports and interfaces with ABAP programming. This cookbook has quick and advanced real world recipes for programming ABAP.It begins with the applications of ABAP Objects and ALV tips and tricks. It then covers Design Patterns and Dynamic Programming in detail.You will also learn the usage of quality improvement tools such as transaction SAT, SQL Trace, and the Code Inspector.Simple transformations and its application in Excel Downloading will also be discussed, as well as the newest topics of Adobe Interactive Forms and the consumption and creation of Web services. The book comes to an end by covering advanced usage of Web Dynpro for ABAP and the latest advancement in Floorplan Manager.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
SAP ABAP Advanced Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Filtering unwanted trace result entries


SQL performance trace files may be very huge and searching for tables may be a time-consuming task. In this recipe, we will see how we can filter irrelevant values from the SQL trace list. We assume that an unrestricted trace like the one shown in the first recipe, Carrying out SQL Trace has already been done.

How to do it...

  1. After a trace has been carried out from the transaction ST05 screen, press the Display Trace button. The portion of the screen that appears is shown in the following screenshot:

  2. The User name appears as default. You may enter a particular table name in the Object Name field, or a set of letters followed by asterisk (*), such as VB* or PA* may be entered.

  3. You may enter one or more operations in the Executed Operation field.

  4. Also, we can enter a value for execution time with a greater-than (GT) operator.

How it works...

Instead of the huge trace list, only the values that pertain to the values entered on the Display Trace screen are shown...