Showing posts with label Workday Business Objects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Workday Business Objects. Show all posts

Wednesday, 12 January 2022

Workday Business Objects (Simple Terminology)

Workday Business Objects (Simple Terminology)



Workday architecture is Object based. Workday stores the data in business objects (BO).
A business object is like a spreadsheet, where each row is an instance of the object. Each column represents an attribute, or field, of the object.

For Example : A supplier is associated with supplier invoices, the invoice is associated with a supplier invoice payment and the payment is associated with a bank account. 

Below Snapshot shows how Business Objects are automatically connected. In the Workday Finance, the Supplier Business Object is linked to Contracts, Purchase Order, Parent/Child and Invoice. Here all of them are BO's.





Workday links related business objects together through single instance or multi-instance fields. Related Business Objects (RBO) enable you to access fields in a report that don’t belong to the Primary Business Object. (PBO)

Example: The Worker business object has a multi-instance field called Dependents. Dependents has a related business object of Dependent. In a report with a primary business object of Worker, you can use the Dependents field to access the fields belonging to the Dependent business object.

A report by name Business Object Details can be used to view:

-Custom and standard reports that use the business object.
-Data sources using the business object as the primary business object.
-Fields associated with the business object.
-Related business objects.

If you want to relate the workday terms with Database Management Systems like Oracle and SQL Server, see below:




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