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Implementing Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central On-Premise - Fourth Edition

You're reading from  Implementing Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central On-Premise - Fourth Edition

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781789133936
Pages 764 pages
Edition 4th Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Roberto Stefanetti Roberto Stefanetti
Profile icon Roberto Stefanetti
Alex Chow Alex Chow
Profile icon Alex Chow
View More author details

Table of Contents (22) Chapters

Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. Exploring Dynamics NAV and MSDYN365BC – Overview 2. Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2018 – An Overview 3. General Considerations 4. Implementation Process – Partner's Perspective 5. Implementation Process – Customer's Perspective 6. Migrating Data 7. Upgrading to Dynamics NAV and MSDYN365BC 8. Development Considerations 9. Implementing Functional Changes 10. Data Analysis and Reporting 11. Debugging with Dynamics NAV and MSDYN365BC 12. Popular Reporting Options 13. Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central 14. Working and Developing with Docker and Sandboxes 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

The posting routines


Microsoft Dynamics NAV has a big keyword (among others), called Post. If you read the word Post anywhere in an application or see the following icon, it means that, if you click on the button, a routine will be run and this will lead to posted documents and posted entries that are on their last stage; it is trusted data that won't change anymore. This is important for many IT and accounting audits:

As explained in The data model section of this chapter, Microsoft Dynamics NAV has some tables called Entries (G/L Entries, Cust. Ledger Entries, Vendor Ledger Entries, Item Ledger Entries, and so on) that correspond to transactions related to master data. The only way to insert data into entry tables is through the posting routines. Numerous validations are carried out during posting routines, as the system has to check whether all of the data is correct and that no inconsistencies exist.

One unique posting process usually creates multiple entries, and all of the entries are...

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