Frank Rogers
18th July 2002, 11:22
If an enlightened user releases all the orders is there a way this can be undone ?

Darren Phillips
18th July 2002, 12:16
I think the only options apart from GTM are cancel production orders which is a bit of a pain because you can only delete them one at a time. Or use report orders completed globally and accept zero completions but you end up with lots of zero orders.

Djie-En
18th July 2002, 12:39
Hi,

Maybe there is somebody who can use SQL and update the table by taking a look to the 'Last update date:'. The date is, according to me, earlier than today.
(But there are several fields, which you should change.)

GN

Frank Rogers
18th July 2002, 13:22
Thanks for suggestions

It is "knowing" what needs to be undone which we were hoping someone may have pioneered as Baan obviously did not expect people to make this type of error !

Djie-En
18th July 2002, 13:40
Hi Frank,

Because of such actions of users, we tell all our users by such kind of sessions to choose one ordernumber and then save the form by ==> OPTIONS: ==> SAVE DEFAULTS.
Then they HAVE to change the value.

GN

Frank Rogers
18th July 2002, 14:13
A very sensible approach , which seems to have been missed in this particular location although in other ones it is adopted

Thanks again

Michael Phifer
18th July 2002, 15:52
I DO NOT recommend correcting this error by modifying the tables. Even if the individual "Knows" what they are doing. Baan has so many links, dependencies and relationships; that even the most knowledgeable person could inadvertently make errors. In table maintenance, these errors are NOT easily found, identified and fixed.

You are much better off deleting each order and resubmitting them. I know it is slow and tedeous, but it is the safest approach.

Michael