Book Image

Extending Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2016 Cookbook

By : Alexander Drogin
Book Image

Extending Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2016 Cookbook

By: Alexander Drogin

Overview of this book

Microsoft Dynamics NAV is an enterprise resource planning (ERP) software suite for organizations. The system offers specialized functionality for manufacturing, distribution, government, retail, and other industries. Its integrated development environment enables customizations with minimal disruption to business processes. The book starts explaining the new features of Dynamics NAV along with how to create and modify a simple module. Moving on, you will learn the importance of thinking beyond the boundaries of C/AL development and the possibilities opened by with it. Next, you will get to know how COM can be used to extend the functionalities of Dynamics NAV. You’ll find out how to extend the Dynamics NAV 2016 version using .NET interoperability and will see the steps required to subscribe to .NET events in order to extend Dynamics NAV. Finally, you’ll see the cmdlets available to manage extension packages. By the end of the book, you will have the knowledge needed to become more efficient in selecting the extending methods, developing and deploying them to the Dynamics NAV, and practicing the best practices.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
Extending Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2016 Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Introduction


A web service is defined by the World Wide Web Consortium as a software system designed to support machine-to-machine interaction over a network. Web services usually provide application interfaces accessible through a communication protocol, such as HTTP. Data and functionality exposed in a web service can be consumed by another software system.

NAV 2016 allows publishing application objects in SOAP or OData web services in several clicks. Three types of objects can be published: codeunits, pages, and queries. The first recipe of the chapter guides the reader through publishing a codeunit in a SOAP web service and exposing its global functions to client applications. The next recipe gives an example of a .Net application consuming the published SOAP service and calling its methods.

After that, we will cover several topics related to OData services and data access. We will walk through publishing a service providing access to NAV data and different approaches to retrieving the...