Reviewing Open Tasks
Access the Enter ECO Assignments form.
- Op St (operation status)
Enter the operation status code that identifies the current status of a work order or engineering change order as the operation steps in the routing are completed. Enter a value from UDC 31/ OS.
- Operation Description
Displays a remark about an item.
- ECO Number (engineering change order number)
Displays a number that identifies an original document. This document can be a voucher, a sales order, an invoice, unapplied cash, a journal entry, and so on.
- Work Center
Displays an alphanumeric code that identifies a separate entity within a business for which you want to track costs. For example, a business unit might be a warehouse location, job, project, work center, branch, or plant.
You can assign a business unit to a document, entity, or person for purposes of responsibility reporting. For example, the system provides reports of open accounts payable and accounts receivable by business unit to track equipment by responsible department.
Business unit security might prevent you from viewing information about business units for which you have no authority.
- Oper Seq# (operation sequence number)
Displays a number used to indicate an order of succession.
In routing instructions, a number that sequences the fabrication or assembly steps in the manufacture of an item. You can track costs and charge time by operation.
In bills of material, a number that designates the routing step in the fabrication or assembly process that requires a specified component part. You define the operation sequence after you create the routing instructions for the item. The JD Edwards EnterpriseOne Shop Floor Management system uses this number in the backflush/preflush by operation process.
In engineering change orders, a number that sequences the assembly steps for the engineering change.
For repetitive manufacturing, a number that identifies the sequence in which an item is scheduled to be produced.
Skip To fields enable you to enter an operation sequence to begin the display of information.
You can use decimals to add steps between existing steps. For example, use 12.5 to add a step between steps 12 and 13.