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ALE, EDI, and IDoc Technologies for SAP, 2nd Edition (Prima Tech's SAP Book Series)
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(Hardcover - July 19, 2001)
by Arvind Nagpal
Sales Rank: 644269
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$56.78
At Amazon

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Hardcover: 764 pages
Publisher: Muska & Lipman/Premier-Trade; 2 edition July 19, 2001
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0761534318
ISBN-13: 978-0761534310
Product Dimensions:
9.5 x 7.8 x 2.2 inches
Shipping Weight: 3.9 pounds
Product Description
Application Link Enabling (ALE) is SAPs proprietary technology that enables data communications between two or more SAP R/3 systems and/or SAP R/3 legacy systems. ALE and EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) technologies are the best fit for this type of communication. With ALE, EDI, & IDoc Technologies for SAP, 2nd Edition, you will acquire powerful skills that are valuable to your employers, clients, or management. A natural follow-up to the original version, ALE, EDI, & IDoc Technologies for SAP (0761519033), this book covers the technical changes of the 4.6 version of SAP R/3. The topics covered in this book will be instrumental to functional and technical staff who are on new SAP implementations, are adding new EDI messages or interfaces to existing implementations, or who are upgrading from version 3.x to 4.x. It is aimed at experienced SAP professionals who are either new to ALE/EDI/IDoc technology or who need a reference for a specific procedure or task. ItemID: 0761534318
Customer Reviews & Comments I've read both the Arvind Nagpal and Rajeev Kasturi books, and I conclude that the Nagpal book is much better for me, a person who has been doing SAP EDI for several years. I do not know either of these authors. I do not have anything to do with the publishers. I bet this is more than many of the reviewers here can say! I know that sheer bulk is not what we are buying here, but let's do some numbers to examine one aspect of the comparison. The Kasturi book starts with 388 pages. Well over 100 pages in the back are tables out of SAP that we can print any time we want (or save a tree and just pull up a screen). Since I've worked with SAP EDI for a few years, I didn't expect a lot of things to be new to me in the first 3 or 4 chapters, but man, there was nothing even moderatly interesting to me in the early part of the book. That left about 150 pages in the middle that, I'll admit, I only skimmed. But the per-page cost of those few possibly valuable pages is quite high! There was a strong ALE / example flavor to the book. As if someone wrote about a few of their favorite implementations. Now, the Nagpal book starts with quite a few more pages (786). There is NOT a huge section of this book dedicated to stuff I could print out of or look up in SAP. Yes, some of this stuff is 'light' too. And again, I'll admit to skimming a lot of it that I didn't have a pressing need to know right now. And yes, there are quite a few print-screens in the book (but I LIKE print-screens). The bottom line is that I, a person who's been using SAP-EDI quite a while, found the Nagpal title MORE INTERESTING, INFORMATIVE, and found it had MORE INFORMATION than the Kasturi book. --Dale--
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ALE, EDI, and IDoc Technologies for SAP, 2nd Edition (Prima Tech's SAP Book Series)
Available from Amazon
Price: $56.78

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