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Details and Setup of Other Flexfields in Oracle® E-Business Suite
Details and Setup of Other Flexfields in Oracle® E-Business Suite
Readers who have been receiving TECHANGES for some time have most likely seen a few articles that
focus on the Oracle accounting flexfield, or the chart of account in Oracle E-Business Suite. The
accounting flexfield allows businesses to keep track of their financial transaction data by organizing them
by different segments of the business, often including department, business unit, or company. The
accounting flexfield is only one of the many key flexfields that must be set up in E-Business Suite, and
there is another type of flexfield called a descriptive flexfield that E-Business Suite users can use for
custom applications. In this article, we will discuss the setup procedures of key flexfields other than the
accounting flexfield.
The following are many of the key flexfields in Oracle E-Business Suite, as well as their codes and owning
applications.
Oracle Assets uses the asset key flexfield to group your assets by non-financial information. You design
your asset key flexfield to record the information you want. Then, you group your assets by asset key so
you can find them without an asset number.
You must be able to get information on labor costs from your payrolls and send this information to other
systems. Payroll costs must go to the general ledger. Additionally, you may need to send them to labor
distribution or project management systems. The Cost Allocation Flexfield lets you record, accumulate,
and report your payroll costs in a way which meets the needs of your enterprise.
Location FlexField
Oracle Assets uses the location flexfield to group your assets by physical location. You design your
location flexfield to record the information you want so that you can report on your assets by location.
You can also transfer assets that share location information as a group, such as when you move an office
to a new location.
You can use the System Items Flexfield (also called the Item Flexfield) for recording and reporting your
item information. You must design and configure your Item Flexfield before you can start defining items.
All Oracle Applications products that reference items share the Item Flexfield and support multiple-
segment implementations. However, this flexfield supports only one structure.
Your first step in planning your key flexfields is to determine which key flexfields your Oracle Applications
product requires. You should also determine the purpose of the key flexfield, as well as the number and
length of its available segment columns. You should also note whether your key flexfield allows more than
one structure, and determine if you do indeed need to define more than one structure. For example, the
System Items Flexfield (Item Flexfield) supports only one structure. Note: You can determine whether a
key flexfield allows more than one structure, as well as other information on the key flexfield, in the
Register Key Flexfield form.
Those key flexfields that allow multiple structures may use different mechanisms to determine which
structure a user sees. For example, the Accounting Flexfield uses multiple structures if you have multiple
sets of books with differing charts of accounts. Your forms determine which Accounting Flexfield structure
to display by using the value of the GL_SET_OF_BOOKS_ID profile option associated with your current
responsibility. Other key flexfields may have a field built into the form that allow a user to essentially
choose which structure appears.
You should decide on the number, order and length of your segments for each structure. You must also
choose how to validate each segment. When you are planning your flexfields, you should consider the
following questions and their corresponding decisions:
How do you want to break down reporting on your key flexfield data? If you want to report on your
data by certain criteria or sub-entities, such as account number or project or region, you may want to
consider making that sub-entity a distinct segment, rather than combining it with another sub-entity,
so that you can categorize and report on smaller discrete units of information.
How often does your organization change? This would affect how you set up your values. For
example, if you disable old cost centers and enable new ones frequently, you would use up cost
center values quickly. You would therefore want to use a larger maximum size for your cost center
value set so that you can have more available values (for example, you have 1,000 available values
for a 3-character value set instead of 100 available values for a 2-character value set).
Do you want to make a segment defined as required (a value must be entered)?
Before defining your key flexfield structures, use the Value Sets window to define any value sets you need.
Cross-Validation Rules form. Uncheck the box if you want to disable any existing cross-validation
rules.
8. Indicate whether you want to freeze your rollup group definitions. If you do, you prevent users from
modifying rollup groups using the Segment Values form. You can freeze rollup groups before or
after you define your flexfield structure.
9. If you want to allow dynamic inserts, check the Allow Dynamic Inserts check box. You would allow
dynamic inserts of new valid combinations into your generic combinations table if you want users to
create new combinations from windows that do not use your combinations table. You should
prevent dynamic inserts if you want to enter new valid combinations only from a single application
window you create to maintain your specific combinations table. You can update this field only if
your application flexfield has been built to allow dynamic inserts, and the flexfield has been defined
in the Register Key Flexfields form with Dynamic Inserts Feasible checked. Otherwise this field is
display only.
10. Choose the Segments button to open the Segments Summary window, and define your flexfield
segments.
11. Save your changes.
12. Freeze your flexfield structure by checking the Freeze Flexfield Definition check box. Do not freeze
your flexfield if you want to set up or modify your flexfield segments or change the appearance of
your key flexfield window. You cannot make most changes while your flexfield is frozen.
13. Compile your frozen flexfield by choosing the Compile button. Your changes are saved automatically
when you compile. You must freeze and compile your flexfield definition before you can use your
flexfield. If you have more than one flexfield structure, you must freeze, save, and compile each
structure separately. If you decide to make changes to your flexfield definition, make sure that you
freeze and save your flexfield definition again after making your changes.
If you need to modify an existing flexfield that has already been set up, eprentise software allows you to
change any key flexfield through an automated mapping process. Available mappings are one-to-one, one-
to-many, and many-to-one at the segment and value levels. Please contact us for additional information
regarding changing existing flexfields.
Bibliographic Reference
Woodhull, S.,Wang, M., and contributing authors. Oracle Applications Flexfields Guide, Release 12. Part
No. B31456-01. 1994, 2006.
Some of the above material may be copyrighted by Oracle Corporation. Oracle is a registered trademark
of Oracle Corporation. Other names may be trademarks of their respected owners.
Curious?
For more information, please call eprentise at 1.888.943.5363 or visit www.eprentise.com.
About eprentise
eprentise provides transformation software products that allow growing companies to make their Oracle E-Business
Suite (EBS) systems agile enough to support changing business requirements, avoid a reimplementation and lower the
total cost of ownership of enterprise resource planning (ERP). While enabling real-time access to complete, consistent
and correct data across the enterprise, eprentise software is able to consolidate multiple production instances, change
existing configurations such as charts of accounts and calendars, and merge, split or move sets of books, operating
units, legal entities, business groups and inventory organizations.