Download - 162892804 User Exits in Oracle Reports
User Exits in Oracle Reports
SRW.USER_EXIT('FND SRWINIT'); in the before report formula, and
SRW.USER_EXIT('FND SRWEXIT'); in the after report formula.
also add P_CONC_REQUEST_ID user parameter with type number (15).
Try to run again.
1. The "Unknown User Exit" error will only be when you try to run the report through Reports Builder (including the Live Preview mode). You will be able to
copy it to your machine, open it, make changes, save it, put it back on the server - you just won't be able to run it locally. This is because in the Before
Report trigger there will be a line like "srw.user_exit('FND SRWINIT');" which refers to code that is compiled into the Concurrent Manager's version of the
Reports executable (set's up the Oracle Apps logon), but not your local Reports executable. One option to avoid the error is to put this call to srw.user_exit
in it's own block with an exception handler (this ignores the error, but doesn't set up the Oracle Apps logon, so no Responsibility setup including no Org ID
for the Org specific views), like:
begin
srw.user_exit('FND_SRWINIT');
exception
when srw.unknown_user_exit then null;
end;
2. Yes, it is possible to change the font size through Reports Builder BUT most Report concurrent programs are set up to only generate ascii text. Check the
Output Format field of the Concurrent Program definition - if it is set to Text, then it will only produce ascii text output, with no formatting (except printer
codes).
3. Yes, you can use printer codes to change font formatting, but I have only ever used this for making certain fields bold and even then had issues with
different printer types showing the printer codes as text.
The best way to produce a nicely formatted output from an Oracle concurrent program is to use BI Publisher - with this method, the report itself only
produces XML text output, but you define a template for converting that to PDF (for example) where you do all of your formatting. Note that directly printing
PDF concurrent request output on Unix requires additional setup over standard printing.
We can integrate Oracle reports with Oracle Application Object Library, and run them as concurrent programs from your forms or through
standard request submission.
These are the user exits available in Oracle Reports that makes AOL integration.
FND SRWINIT
FND SRWEXIT
FND FORMAT_CURRENCY
FND FLEXIDVAL
FND FLEXSQL
FND SRWINIT
This is a User Exit which sets your profile option values and allows Oracle AOL user exits to detect that they have been called by oracle
repots.
It must be included if one is using any ORACLE APPLICATION OBJECT LIBRARY features in his report (such as concurrent processing).
FND SRWINIT also allows your report to use the correct organization automatically.
Can be used in BEFORE-REPORT Trigger.
Syntax is : SRW.USER_EXIT(‘FND SRWINIT’);
FND SRWEXIT
This user exit ensures that all the memory allocated for AOL user exits has been freed up properly.
Can be used in AFTER- REPORT Trigger.
Syntax is : SRW.USER_EXIT(‘FND SRWEXIT’);
FND FORMAT_CURRENCY
To format the currency amount dynamically depending upon the precision of the actual currency value, standard precision, users profile
values and location (country) of the site.
You obtain the currency value from the database into an Oracle Reports column.
Define another Oracle Reports column, a formula column of type CHAR, which executes the FORMAT_CURRENCY user exit to format the
currency value.
A displayed field has this formula column as its source so that the formatted value is automatically copied into the field for display.
Syntax:
FND FORMAT_CURRENCY
CODE=:column containing currency
DISPLAY_WIDTH=field width for display
AMOUNT=:source column name
DISPLAY=:display column name
[MINIMUM_PRECISION=:P_MIN_PRECISION]
[PRECISION={STANDARD|EXTENDED}]
[DISPLAY_SCALING_FACTOR=:P_SCALING_FACTOR]
FND FLEXSQL
Call this user exit to create a SQL fragment usable by your report to tailor your SELECT statement that retrieves flexfield values. This fragment
allows you to SELECT flexfield values or to create a WHERE, ORDER BY, GROUP BY, or HAVING clause to limit or sort the flexfield values
returned by your SELECT statement. You call this user exit once for each fragment you need for your select statement. You define all flexfield
columns in your report as type CHARACTER even though your table may use NUMBER or DATE or some other datatype.
Syntax:
FND FLEXSQL
CODE=”flexfield code”
APPL_SHORT_NAME=”application short name”
OUTPUT=”:output lexical parameter name”
MODE=”{ SELECT | WHERE | HAVING | ORDER BY}”
[DISPLAY="{ALL | flexfield qualifier | segment number}"]
[SHOWDEPSEG="{Y | N}"]
[NUM=":structure defining lexical" | MULTINUM="{Y | N}"]
[TABLEALIAS="code combination table alias"]
[OPERATOR="{ = | < | > | <= | >= | != | "||" | BETWEEN | QBE}"]
[OPERAND1=":input parameter or value"]
[OPERAND2=":input parameter or value"]
FND FLEXIDVAL
Call this user exit to populate fields for display. You pass the key flexfields data retrieved by the query into this exit from the formula column. With
this exit you display values, descriptions and prompts by passing appropriate token (any one of VALUE, DESCRIPTION, APROMPT or
LPROMPT).
Syntax:
FND FLEXIDVAL
CODE=”flexfield code”
APPL_SHORT_NAME=”application short name”
DATA=”:source column name”
[NUM=":structure defining source column/lexical"]
[DISPLAY="{ALL|flexfield qualifier|segment number}"]
[IDISPLAY="{ALL|flexfield qualifier|segment
number}"]
[SHOWDEPSEG="{Y | N}"]
[VALUE=":output column name"]
[DESCRIPTION=":output column name"]
[APROMPT=":output column name"]
[LPROMPT=":output column name"]
[PADDED_VALUE=":output column name"]
[SECURITY=":column name"]