Book Image

Extending Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance and Supply Chain Management Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Simon Buxton
Book Image

Extending Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance and Supply Chain Management Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Simon Buxton

Overview of this book

Dynamics 365 Finance and Supply Chain Management is Microsoft’s ERP solution, which can be implemented as a cloud or on-premise solution to facilitate better decision-making with the help of contemporary, scalable ERP system tools. This book is updated with the latest features of Dynamics 365 Finance and Supply Chain Management including Chain of Command (CoC), Acceptance Test Libraries (ATL), and Business Events. The book not only features more than 100 tutorials that allow you to create and extend business solutions, but also addresses specific problems and offers solutions with insights into how they work. This cookbook starts by helping you set up a Azure DevOps project and taking you through the different data types and structures used to create tables. You will then gain an understanding of user interfaces, write extensible code, manage data entities, and even model Dynamics 365 ERP for security. As you advance, you’ll learn how to work with various in-built Dynamics frameworks such as SysOperation, SysTest, and Business Events. Finally, you’ll get to grips with automated build management and workflows for better application state management. By the end of this book, you’ll have become proficient in packaging and deploying end-to-end scalable solutions with Microsoft Dynamics 365 Finance and Supply Chain Management.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)

Connecting Visual Studio to Azure DevOps

Each developer has their own development virtual machine (VM), hosted either in Azure or locally. This is by design and is part of the application life cycle process. Connecting to Azure DevOps allows our code to be checked into source control and allows the team to work together on the same code base. Each developer would get the latest code from the source control and then check in their changes according to their organization's development methodology. As part of this check-in process, they can associate the check-ins to work items that were created in Azure DevOps (tasks, bugs, user stories), which allows us to easily determine what work is being deployed in a build. This process also allows test projects to be automatically executed when the build is generated.

We will be working with a two-branch strategy, which means starting...