Defining Logical Criteria
When you setup an eligibility criterion, you must define two things:
- The field to be compared
- The comparison method
You have the following choices in respect of identifying the field to be compared:
- You can retrieve a characteristic value linked to any of the following:
- The service agreement being billed
- The service agreement's account
- The main person linked to the service agreement's account
- The characteristic premise linked to the service agreement
- One of the service points linked to the service agreement
- In addition, you can use a characteristic value that is derived while the rate is being calculated (characteristic values can be created by SQ rules, register rules and many other rate component algorithms)
- You can retrieve the value of a given service quantity
- You can retrieve the final value of an earlier rate component
- You can execute an algorithm to retrieve a field value from someplace else in the system. This is a very powerful feature, but it's not terribly intuitive. We'll present a few examples later in this section to illustrate the power of this approach.
You have the following choices in respect of identifying the comparison method:
- You can choose an operator (e.g., >, <, =, BETWEEN, IN, etc.) and a comparison value.
- You can execute an algorithm that performs the comparison (and returns TRUE, FALSE or INSUFFICIENT DATA). This is also a very powerful feature, but it's not terribly intuitive. We'll present a few examples later in this section to illustrate the power of this approach.
The Examples Of Rate Component Eligibility Rules provide examples to help you understand this design.