This section describes utilities you can use to achieve standard functionality in your forms.
| Summary | procedure FND_STANDARD.FORM_INFO( version IN varchar2, title IN varchar2, application_short_name IN varchar2, date_last_modified IN varchar2, last_modified_by IN varchar2); |
| Description | FND_STANDARD.FORM_INFO provides information about the form. Call it as the first step in your WHEN-NEW-FORM-INSTANCE trigger. The TEMPLATE form provides you with a skeleton call that you must modify. |
See: Special Triggers in the TEMPLATE form
| Summary | procedure FND_STANDARD.SET_WHO; |
| Description | SET_WHO loads WHO fields with proper user information. Call in PRE-UPDATE, PRE-INSERT for each block with WHO fields. You do not need to call FND_GLOBAL if you use SET_WHO to populate your WHO fields. |
See: Tracking Data Changes With Record History (WHO) and FND_GLOBAL:WHO Column Maintenance.
| Summary | function FND_STANDARD.SYSTEM_DATE return date; |
| Description | This function behaves exactly like the built-in SYSDATE, only cached for efficiency. You should use it in your Oracle Forms PL/SQL code in place of the built-in SYSDATE. |
| Summary | function FND_STANDARD.USER return varchar2; |
| Description | This function behaves exactly like the built-in USER, only cached for efficiency. You should use it in your Oracle Forms PL/SQL code in place of the built-in USER. |