ManufacturingOperationTask

Namespace: urn:supplychain.lists.webservices.netsuite.com

Fields

NameTypeCardinalityLabelRequiredHelp
actualWork double 0..1 Actual Work F
autoCalculateLag boolean 0..1 Auto-calculate Lag F Check the Auto-calculate Lag box if you want NetSuite to calculate lag times for operation tasks. For more information, click help and read Operations Overlap.
completedQuantity double 0..1 Completed Quantity F
costDetailList ManufacturingCostDetailList 0..1
customFieldList CustomFieldList 0..1
customForm RecordRef 0..1 Custom Form F Select the form to use with this work order. If you customized a sales order form, select it here, or click New to customize a new sales order form.
endDate dateTime 0..1 End Date F In the Production End Date field, enter the date you expect to complete assembly production. This field defaults to show the transaction date plus lead time. Note: When you use Demand Planning, the assembly supply is based on the production end date. Using the Manufacturing Routing feature: When you use the Routing and Demand Planning features to generate supply work orders, the function of the Production Start Date field and Production End Date field depend on the selected scheduling method NetSuite uses to calculate production requirements. * Forward Scheduling When you use forward scheduling, you set a production start date and NetSuite calculates the time, materials, and resources required to complete all necessary operations to finish the task. The production end date is determined based on these calculations. When using the Forward Scheduling method, on work orders, the Production Start Date field is required and defaults to the current date. The Production End Date field is grayed out because it will be calculated. * Backward Scheduling When you use backward scheduling, you set the production end date, which is the date you need to have the completed items. Then, based on data from the associated routing, as well as the related work center calendar, NetSuite calculates the time, materials, and resources required to complete all necessary operations. The production start date is determined based on these calculations. When using the Backward Scheduling method, on work orders, the Production End Date field is required. The Production Start Date field is grayed out because it will be calculated. Note: This calculated start date may be a date in the past, prior to the current date. For more details, click Help and read Production Scheduling Methods Overview.
estimatedWork double 0..1 Estimated Work F
inputQuantity double 0..1 Input Quantity F
laborResources long 0..1 Labor Resources T
machineResources long 0..1 Machine Resources T
manufacturingCostTemplate RecordRef 0..1 Manufacturing Cost Template T
manufacturingWorkCenter RecordRef 0..1 Manufacturing Work Center T
message string 0..1 Comments F
operationSequence long 0..1 Operation Sequence T
order RecordRef 0..1 Insert Before F
predecessorList ManufacturingOperationTaskPredecessorList 0..1
remainingWork double 0..1 Remaining Work F
runRate double 0..1 Run Rate (Min/Unit) T
setupTime double 0..1 Setup Time (Min) T
startDate dateTime 0..1 Start Date F In the Production Start Date field, enter the date you expect to begin assembly production. This field defaults to show the transaction date. Note: When you use Demand Planning, the component demand is based on the production start date. Using the Manufacturing Routing feature: When you use the Routing and Demand Planning features to generate supply work orders, the function of the Production Start Date field and Production End Date field depend on the selected scheduling method NetSuite uses to calculate production requirements. * Forward Scheduling When you use forward scheduling, you set a production start date and NetSuite calculates the time, materials, and resources required to complete all necessary operations to finish the task. The production end date is determined based on these calculations. When using the Forward Scheduling method, on work orders, the Production Start Date field is required and defaults to the current date. The Production End Date field is grayed out because it will be calculated. * Backward Scheduling When you use backward scheduling, you set the production end date, which is the date you need to have the completed items. Then, based on data from the associated routing, as well as the related work center calendar, NetSuite calculates the time, materials, and resources required to complete all necessary operations. The production start date is determined based on these calculations. When using the Backward Scheduling method, on work orders, the Production End Date field is required. The Production Start Date field is grayed out because it will be calculated. Note: This calculated start date may be a date in the past, prior to the current date. For more details, click Help and read Production Scheduling Methods Overview.
status ManufacturingOperationTaskStatus 0..1 Status F
title string 0..1 Name T
workOrder RecordRef 0..1 Work Order F

Attributes

NameType
externalId string
internalId string

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