Level size
You can assign a size to each level. The size determines the maximum number of accounting units that you can use at that level. For example, at level one in an organization, a size of 2 represents a maximum of 99 accounting units at that level and a size of 3 represents a maximum of 999 accounting units at that level. You can define levels and level sizes on Company (GL10.1).
Level sizing rules
These rules apply to level sizes:
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You can define up to five levels of accounting units in a company.
Note: Assign level sizes that will allow for future growth, but don't greatly exaggerate sizes. Assigning a size that is larger than you will ever need can unnecessarily slow processing time. -
The maximum size of a level is 15 digits.
Note: A level size of 15 digits at level one would allow up to 999,999,999,999,999 accounting units that level. -
You can assign up to 30 digits total to all of your levels. For example, if you assigned a level size of 3 to your first level, then you will have 27 digits remaining that you can assign to the rest of your levels.
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You cannot change the size of a level once it was defined.
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You can define unused levels at any time in the company lifecycle.
Example
This example shows a portion of LGE's accounting unit setup. They defined three levels and assigned a size of two to each level. Based on the sizes assigned, LGE can have up to 99 divisions in their company structure. They can have up to 9,801 (99 x 99) departments because each division can be further broken down into 99 departments. At level three, they can have a total of 970,299 (99 x 99 x 99) cost centers.
Level | Description | Size |
---|---|---|
1 | Division | 2 |
2 | Department | 2 |
3 | Cost Center | 2 |