How to determine if a report or a form has been modified

Business Situation

How many times have you walked into a GP implementation done by a previous VAR and cannot establish what changes have been done on a report, if any? Or how many times have you come across forms and reports dictionaries with tons of objects and cannot tell by simply looking at these if they have been changed or not? Or have you made some changes to a report a few years aback and now cannot remember what these changes were? I get this question every once in a while and finally someone was keen enough to post it on the Dynamics GP public newsgroup.

Solution

Let me start by saying that ALL modified forms and reports should ALWAYS be backed up in the form of package files, and that ALL these package files should be stored in a source code control repository -- for example, Visual Source Safe -- and versioned if all possible, with notes on all changes done from version to version. However, this is not always possible, especially if the company happens to be a small company with limited technical and software development resources -- unless of course, the business happens to do software development :-) ).

In order to establish what changes have been done to a form or a report, without having a source control repository, you can use old fashioned Microsoft Word... well, I will be using Microsoft Word 2007 for this example. In addition, we will use a slightly modified version of the SOP Blank Invoice report.






















*Click on image to enlarge

1) Export the modified report to a package file. Go to Microsoft Dynamics GP > Tools > Customize > Customization Maintenance. Highlight the SOP Blank Invoice report and click on Export. Save the file as SOPBlankInvoice_Modified.package


















*Click on image to enlarge


2) From a workstation not pointing to the REPORTS.DIC dictionary file containing the modified report or from a standalone copy of GP, say for example the one you carry on your laptop, print the SOP Blank Invoice report to screen. Go to Transactions > Sales > Sales Transactions and choose an invoice. Print to screen. Click on Modify to open the report with Report Writer. Once the report is shown in the Report Layout window, return to Dynamics GP.















*Report with no customizations. Click on image to enlarge


3) Repeat step 1 on your standalone environment, this time saving the file as SOPBlankInvoice_Original.package. Move the SOPBlankInvoice_Modified.package file to the same directory with the SOPBlankInvoice_Original.package file. This will both files easily accessible.


















*Click on image to enlarge

4) Open Microsoft Word 2007. Click on the Review menu item.




*Click on image to enlarge

5) Click on the Compare option. Open your SOPBlankInvoice_Original.package in the Original document column, open SOPBlankInvoice_Modified.Package in the Revised document. Changes can be labeled with markers to allow for easy identification. Word will run the comparison and highlight any changes between the two documents














*Click on image to enlarge

Remember: it's not about the tools, it's about how you use these tools to meet your needs. I hope this article provides a mechanism to quickly and accurately identify changes between original reports and customized reports and help you get a headstart when working at customers and customizations you have not created -- or may have and don't recall :-) .

Until next post!

MG.-
Mariano Gomez, MVP, MCP
Maximum Global Business, LLC
http://www.maximumglobalbusiness.com/

Comments

Jivtesh Singh said…
Excellent tip! I didnt know Word 2007 had this feature ... I used to use Windiff for the comparisons.
Anonymous said…
A reminder that if you start with an empty FORMS.DIC importing of the package(s) will not contain any changes or additions that had been made to formats or resource strings.
These will need to be redone within Modifer and/or Report Writer.

The classic here in Australia is removing the format string for phone numbers.

------
Robert
Mariano Gomez said…
Robert,

Thanks for the insight! That's an excellent point. I am glad to see you posting comments to my articles :-) It's hard to predict how other countries use GP. Your experieces are valuable so I encourage you to comment on my articles.

Best regards,

MG.-
Mariano Gomez, MVP
Maximum Global Business, LLC
http://www.maximumglobalbusiness.com
Greg said…
Great tip! I am attempting to organize and consolidate dozens of modified GP reports for a client and your tip on how to identify report modifications with Word will be very helpful.

Also, this is the first I ever heard about backing up modified reports with package files. I was taught to just do nightly file system backups of the Reports.dic that is shared on the network. Backing up individual reports with package files seems to allow for a lot more control. Thanks for the post!

Popular posts from this blog

DBMS: 12 Microsoft Dynamics GP: 0 error when updating to Microsoft Dynamics GP 2013 R2

Do I have to use those "Z-" currency IDs in GP?

Microsoft Dynamics GP Scrolling Windows and Line Sequence Numbers