Infor LN & Baan Tips & Tricks for EXECUTIVES
OPERATIONS: Update, Cancel or Remove Outbound Order Lines
When the originating order or order line of an outbound order line is canceled or changed, this affects the outbound order line and may affect the related outbound advice, shipments, or shipment lines.
For most order origins, warehousing order-type parameters determine whether these actions are allowed:
- Update the outbound order line if the originating order is changed.
- Cancel the originating order line and the outbound order line.
- Delete the canceled outbound order line.
If updating is allowed, changes made to the originating order are updated to the outbound order line and the related outbound advice, and, if present, picking lists, are deleted.
If updating is not allowed, a message is displayed, and the input is blocked when you try to change the originating order line.
If canceling is allowed, the outbound order line is deleted or set to Canceled when the originating order line is canceled.
When a canceled outbound order line is deleted, if present, the related outbound advice and picking list are also deleted. Outbound order lines originating from manual order origins cannot be deleted when canceled.
To process an outbound order line that is not deleted but set to Canceled, the outbound order line must be set to Shipped. The status of the outbound order line determines whether all steps of the outbound and shipment procedures must be completed to process the outbound order line.
When a canceled outbound order line is set to Shipped, the shipped quantity is automatically set to 0. You can create a transfer order to return the not-shipped goods to inventory.
If canceling is not allowed, you cannot cancel the originating order line or the outbound order line. A message to that effect is displayed when you try to cancel the originating order line.
To prevent the goods from being shipped when canceling is not allowed, you must complete the outbound and shipment procedures. When confirming the shipment line, you must set the shipped quantities to 0 and create a transfer order to return the not-shipped goods to inventory.
FINANCE: Currency Differences Accounts
Currency differences can make the financial analysis and reconciliation more complex. These types of currency differences can occur:
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Currency differences
Currency result caused by fluctuations in the exchange rate, for example, if the rate differs between the invoice date and the payment date.
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Exchange gain and loss
Currency result caused by the use of different exchange rate types, for example, the Sales rate type and the Internal rate type, or if using the rate determiner you have changed the exchange rate for a transaction during the order handling procedure.
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Translation gain and loss
Currency result caused by the use of different currencies during the order handling procedure, for example, if the order currency or the payment currency differs from the invoice currency.
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Destination gain and loss
Currency result caused by different results when the transaction currency is converted to the various home currencies. Destination gain and loss can only occur in an independent currency system.
To support good reconciliation possibilities, currency differences and exchange gain and loss are posted to these accounts:
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Exchange Gain and Loss
For differences between related amounts (debit and credit postings) due to different exchange rate types or different currency rates.
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Currency Translation
For transactions in which the debit posting and the credit posting are made in different currencies.
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Currency Differences contra account
For currency differences on the invoice accrual account due to rate changes between the receipt date and the approval date of the invoice and calculated when you close a financial period.
TECHNOLOGY: Advantages of Data Replication
Instead of sharing tables through logical linking, you can replicate table content between companies. This approach allows certain non-key attributes of a record to vary by company. For example, if you replicate bills of materials rather than sharing them, each company can associate a different warehouse with the same bill of material. This way, the bills of materials are consistent across companies, while the warehouses can differ.
Replication also enables selective availability of records in other companies. For instance, when replicating items, you might limit which items are available in a sales company based on their item group, only including end items. You can further refine replication to specific subsets, such as particular item groups.
Keep in mind that replication requires any referenced tables to be either replicated or shared as well.