Day: April 4, 2016

Best Practice for Building CRM Queries in an SSRS Custom Report

When writing a custom SSRS report for CRM, one of the greatest features is the ability to include pre-filtering in your reports.  By adding the CRMAF_ prefix to the alias assigned to the table you are querying, it will pass your selected CRM records as the context for your report. E.g.:

SELECT * FROM FilteredAccount AS CRMAF_Account

When writing a custom SSRS report for CRM, one of the greatest features is the ability to include pre-filtering in your reports.  By adding the CRMAF_ prefix to the alias assigned to the table you are querying, it will pass your selected CRM records as the context for your report. E.g.:

SELECT * FROM FilteredAccount AS CRMAF_Account

When writing a custom SSRS report for CRM, one of the greatest features is the ability to include pre-filtering in your reports.  By adding the CRMAF_ prefix to the alias assigned to the table you are querying, it will pass your selected CRM records as the context for your report. E.g.:

SELECT * FROM FilteredAccount AS CRMAF_Account

When writing a custom SSRS report for CRM, one of the greatest features is the ability to include pre-filtering in your reports.  By adding the CRMAF_ prefix to the alias assigned to the table you are querying, it will pass your selected CRM records as the context for your report. E.g.:

SELECT * FROM FilteredAccount AS CRMAF_Account

When writing a custom SSRS report for CRM, one of the greatest features is the ability to include pre-filtering in your reports.  By adding the CRMAF_ prefix to the alias assigned to the table you are querying, it will pass your selected CRM records as the context for your report. E.g.:

SELECT * FROM FilteredAccount AS CRMAF_Account

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