Well, I'm not sure if that's but best way to sum it up, but that's only so relevant.

However one would describe how you're going about this, how is it working for you?

-David


On Jul 27, 2008, at 1:30 PM, brijesh m wrote:

Hi David,
I don't think I have demanded any thing out of the box from the community I have just put forward a simple scenario in front of the community and wants to discuss thats it.

Thanks
Brijesh M.

David E Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Community is about taking AND giving and working together to solve
problems and forward. If you want support on your terms, or in other
words you won't accept the many helpful replies already given and try
to understand them and the system better, then community may not work
for you.

-David


On Jul 27, 2008, at 1:05 PM, brijesh m wrote:

I am thinking we are on community....... :)

BJ Freeman  wrote: sounds like Hot wax has the
the market cornered.
guess you got your answer.
:)


Jacopo Cappellato sent the following on 7/27/2008 11:39 AM:

On Jul 27, 2008, at 7:55 PM, brijesh m wrote:

Hi BJ,
the thing is that WIP never ever goes to the inventory wheather the
whole process is completed or just its corresponding completion task
got completed. My query is that I have to generate the intermediate
product so that if my successive task is not able to run by some way due to some disturbances in my facility(in real time) then it should
get stored as an inventory for the future use. How can i achieve
it ?

You may use different product ids... however it is difficult to
answer
your questions without an accurate requirements analysis, but you can
try to find a solution (and maybe others will share their
experiences)
but if you want to speed up the process (and probably achieve better
results) I'd suggest to contact one of the professional service
providers for OFBiz (for example, the company for which I work for...
Hotwax Media).

Cheers,

Jacopo




Thanks
Brijesh M.

BJ Freeman  wrote: By final step I mean all steps
completed and you have the finished product.

BJ Freeman sent the following on 7/27/2008 10:18 AM:
Though Jacopo gave you the technical answer
I think of it this way:
WIP as a parts on a cart or conveyor belt that got though processes
before they are finished. so they don't go to inventory, until
the final
step.

brijesh m sent the following on 7/27/2008 5:00 AM:
Hi friends,
I have given the status of "work in progress"(WIP) to the product
in the intermediate stage of my manufacturing process. But after
completion of its corresponding producing task this product(WIP)
was
not incremented in inventory. Is there any way out ?


Thanks
Brijesh M.

















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