As a standard function in Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2015, the Selling Unit of Measure on the Item Card will determine the quantity of the individual component items produced and included in that UOM sold on the Sales Order Line. In some applications, the use of CASE as the UOM throughout the process is all that is required for production output, when the component items are all consumed in that CASE output. Here is a simple example of the process.
Tag Archives: Card
Dynamically hide and show controls on Card Page
Do you recognize that? That moment you think ‘I should have known that earlier’. Well, for me this was such a moment, as I realized that something that allegedly wasn’t possible since we said goodbye to the Classic Client, proved to be possible but in a different way…
Microsoft Dynamics NAV: Everything You Need to Know About Using the Item Card Replenishment Fast Tab
There are two fast tabs on the item card that tell the system about replenishing the item: The Replenishment fast tab and the Planning fast tab.
This blog explains what the fields on the Replenishment fast tab do.
Using Units of Measure on Item Card Setups
Times are tough and poor Gru has gathered all the minions together to inform them that production on new minions has to stop and a full reconciliation of component parts has to be done. The Minion factory is shutting down. Current Sales orders will be fulfilled and then the machines will lie dormant.
The Rounding Precision Field on the Microsoft Dynamics NAV Item Card
The scenario:
When you look at the on-hand inventory for an item, you see fractional quantities in stock. Your natural instinct would be to look at the Rounding Precision Field on the Item Card and change it to 1. You then would expect that from that point on you would not see any fractional on hands created.
In this case, your natural instinct is not correct (and mine for a long period of time).
Cost Roll-Up Details on the Item Card
Here is a super simple, but very useful modification for displaying the rolled-up costs on the item card in Microsoft Dynamics NAV. The item table has 10 standard fields that contain the rolled-up costs that are calculated during a regular standard cost roll-up. Those fields are not by default added to the item card; just adding them is quick and adds lots of values to the users that are looking at the costs shares of items.
NAV: Kit BOM on Sales Order Does Not Match Item Card
Recently, I had a support question come across my desk asking why inventory was not showing correctly for “Qty. on Kit Sales Lines” for items with kit components. After a little investigation, my colleagues and I uncovered that the inventory was showing correctly, but the Kit Bill of Material (BOM) was removed from the Item Card, causing confusion