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PutnikAda2017-04-03 22:59:19
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PutnikAda, 2017-04-03 22:59:19

Erp system for a novice developer?

Welcome all. I am fond of automation of office work, at a rudimentary level, due to a natural craving for automation of actions with a computer. My main specialty is far from programming, but at my last job I organized a small program based on Microsoft Acces and MS SQL Server to automate the work of several departments. The main functions are a task scheduler with a calendar, documentation accounting, creating customer questionnaires, creating the same type of Word documents by substituting values ​​from the database into pre-prepared templates and small calculations in Excel based on data from the database. During the "development" I acquired skills in working with SQL database and programming languages ​​С# and Visual Basic. But now I realized that this is exactly the thing that I want to do in the future, I really want to change the profile of work, but I understand that at this stage my skills are extremely insufficient. I would like to try to work with some larger platform than Access. I looked in the direction of 1C, but I am confused by its obsession with the internal programming language, and I want to continue learning C # as a more universal language. I also watched lessons on Microsoft Dynamics and SAP, but I was afraid of the scale) Can anyone advise a relatively common ERP that supports C # as an auxiliary tool and is loyal to noobs?)
I apologize for the confusion, it is difficult to formulate the question due to inexperience)

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2 answer(s)
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Victor P., 2017-04-13
@Jeer

In this country, the situation is approximately the same - 95% of ERP systems are 1C, 3% are SAP, 2% are the rest. 1C is simple, a stripped-down version can work from a flash drive, which is great for near-zero reporting, there is a sea of ​​\u200b\u200b(inexpensive) specialists. Sap German development, expensive, bulky. But it can handle heavy loads, so it is taken by anyone who can afford it (oil workers), or other huge offices with resources (Russian Railways). Also, after import substitutions in the same Russian Railways, there were talks about switching to the erp system Galaxy (or something like that), that is, other systems seem to exist, but I personally would not do this. In Sapa they pay more money, but I don’t know how to get there from the street either. That is, well, you can get some Sapov courses, but you won’t be able to look at the system at home, so it’s not clear how to study if you haven’t come across it before.
As for obsession with the internal language, well, it's like that for everyone, Sap also has its own internal language.
If you look in the direction of c #, then you need to look exactly in the direction of Microsoft, I have not heard about Microsoft Dynamics before. I know that at one time Microsoft bought Axapta, the internal language is x++ (C-like), but they planned to transfer it to the .net platform (which would mean support for all .net languages, including c#). Unfortunately, I don’t know how it ended with them and whether it ended at all.

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Leonid, 2019-05-08
@caballero

https://zippy.com.ua/zstore web interface, open source, php mysql
modular architecture, easy to expand

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