This chapter discusses:
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne products.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne application fundamentals.
Common fields used in this implementation guide.
This implementation guide refers to the following JD Edwards EnterpriseOne products from Oracle:
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Accounts Payable.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Accounts Receivable.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Address Book.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Advanced Cost Accounting
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Advanced Pricing.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne General Accounting.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Fixed Assets.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Inventory Management.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Manufacturing
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Procurement.
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Product Data Management
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Sales Order Management.
Additional, essential information describing the setup and design of your system appears in a companion volume of documentation called JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Financial Management Application Fundamentals 9.0 Implementation Guide..
Customers must conform to the supported platforms for the release as detailed in the JD Edwards EnterpriseOne minimum technical requirements. In addition, JD Edwards EnterpriseOne may integrate, interface, or work in conjunction with other Oracle products. Refer to the cross-reference material in the Program Documentation at http://oracle.com/contracts/index.html for Program prerequisites and version cross-reference documents to assure compatibility of various Oracle products.
See Also
JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Financial Management Application Fundamentals Implementation
A companion Guide called About This Documentation contains general information, including:
Related documentation, common page elements, and typographical conventions for guides.
Information about using guides and managing the documentation library.
Information on the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) country and currency codes used within documentation.
A glossary of useful JD Edwards EnterpriseOne terms that are used in documentation.
See Also
About This Documentation Preface
Managing the Online Library and Implementation Guides
ISO Country and Currency Codes
Glossary of JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Terms
2nd Item Number , 3rd Item Number, and Item Number |
Enter a number that identifies the item. The system provides three separate item numbers plus an extensive cross-reference capability to alternative item numbers. The three types of item numbers are: Item Number (short). An 8-digit, computer-assigned item number. 2nd Item Number. A 25-digit, user defined, alphanumeric item number. 3rd Item Number. A 25-digit, user defined, alphanumeric item number. In addition to these three basic item numbers, the system provides an extensive cross-reference search capability. You can define numerous cross-references to alternative part numbers. For example, you can define substitute item numbers, replacements, bar codes, customer numbers, or supplier numbers. You can enter *ALL in the Item Number field to indicate that all items for the supplier come from the specified country of origin and original country of origin. |
Fixed Asset Number |
Enter an 8-digit number that uniquely identifies an asset. |
G/L Date (general ledger date) |
Enter a date that identifies the financial period to which the transaction will be posted. You define financial periods for a date pattern code that you assign to the company record. The system compares the date that you enter on the transaction to the fiscal date pattern assigned to the company to retrieve the appropriate fiscal period number, as well as to perform date validations. |
Main Fixed Asset Number |
Enter an identification code for an asset in one of these formats: Asset number (a computer-assigned, 8-digit, numeric control number) Unit number (a 12-character alphanumeric field) Serial number (a 25-character alphanumeric field) Every asset has an asset number. You can use unit number and serial number to further identify assets as needed. If this is a data entry field, the first character you enter indicates whether you are entering the primary (default) format that is defined for the system, or one of the other two formats. A special character (such as / or *) in the first position of this field indicates which asset number format you are using. You assign special characters to asset number formats on the Fixed Assets system constants form. |
Object Account |
Enter the portion of a general ledger account that refers to the division of the Cost Code (for example, labor, materials, and equipment) into subcategories. For example, you can divide the Cost Code for labor into regular time, premium time, and burden. Note. If you use a flexible chart of accounts and the object account is set to 6 digits, it is recommended that you use all 6 digits. For example, entering 000456 is not the same as entering 456 because if you enter 456 the system enters three blank spaces to fill a 6-digit object. |
Subledger |
Enter a code that identifies a detailed, auxiliary account within a general ledger account. A subledger can be an equipment item number or an address book number. If you enter a subledger, you must also specify the subledger type. |
Subledger Type |
Enter a user-defined code (00/ST) that is used with the Subledger field to identify the subledger type and how the system performs subledger editing. On the User-Defined Codes form, the second line of the description controls how the system performs editing. This is either hard-coded or user-defined. Values include: A: Alphanumeric field, do not edit. N: Numeric field, right justify and zero fill. C: Alphanumeric field, right justify and blank fill. |
Subsidiary |
Enter a subset of an object account. Subsidiary accounts include detailed records of the accounting activity for an object account. Note. If you are using a flexible chart of accounts and the object account is set to six digits, you must use all six digits. For example, entering 000456 is not the same as entering 456 because, if you enter 456, the system enters three blank spaces to fill a six-digit object. |