Having such document will take a long time, and reading and understanding it would take even longer.
And by the end you won't get any value out of it.
It will be faster if you learn the product from front end and learn how to do all the steps. Once you do that, then you can learn where the daa resides and how the data flows. After you learn the tables and how they are used, then you can move to fields and how they are used.
Ahmed Rashed Amini
Independent Consultant/Developer
It will be faster if you learn the product from front end and learn how to do all the steps.
I agree. Once I learned Warehouse Management from the front end through the manual it was much easier to understand the table structures and how they all worked together.
Unfortunately I think Alex is right. This does not look like someone that wants to learn Navision, more someone that has an empty box that needs a tick in it.
I'm not so sure about the intentions of the OP, in itself it's a legitimate question, one that I've wanted the answer for too. If this intention is indeed behind this question, it's something that I've stopped worrying about months ago. It'll turn around at some point.
Does anyone have data dictionary of NAV tables?
I would like to have a document which lists out all NAV tables and their specifications.
Why do you need this? Whats the reason for?
Do you need only a list of all tables with his name and his caption in you language or did you need it the find out the relations between the tables?
Comments
1. Tools --> Object Designer
2. Click on Tables
3. Select All
4. File --> Export
5. Export as text
AP Commerce, Inc. = where I work
Getting Started with Dynamics NAV 2013 Application Development = my book
Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV - 3rd Edition = my 2nd book
And by the end you won't get any value out of it.
It will be faster if you learn the product from front end and learn how to do all the steps. Once you do that, then you can learn where the daa resides and how the data flows. After you learn the tables and how they are used, then you can move to fields and how they are used.
Independent Consultant/Developer
blog: https://dynamicsuser.net/nav/b/ara3n
I agree. Once I learned Warehouse Management from the front end through the manual it was much easier to understand the table structures and how they all worked together.
My Blog - nav.education
AP Commerce, Inc. = where I work
Getting Started with Dynamics NAV 2013 Application Development = my book
Implementing Microsoft Dynamics NAV - 3rd Edition = my 2nd book
This people is where we are heading. ](*,)
RIS Plus, LLC
MVP - Business Apps
No PM,please use the forum. || May the <SOLVED>-attribute be in your title!
Why do you need this? Whats the reason for?
Do you need only a list of all tables with his name and his caption in you language or did you need it the find out the relations between the tables?