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Learning ServiceNow

You're reading from   Learning ServiceNow Get started with ServiceNow administration and development to manage and automate your IT Service Management processes

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785883323
Length 358 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Authors (2):
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Sylvain Hauser Sylvain Hauser
Author Profile Icon Sylvain Hauser
Sylvain Hauser
Tim Woodruff Tim Woodruff
Author Profile Icon Tim Woodruff
Tim Woodruff
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

1. The Interface FREE CHAPTER 2. Lists and Forms 3. UI Customization 4. Understanding Data and Relationships 5. Tasks and Workflows 6. UI and Data Policies 7. User Administration and Security 8. Introduction to Scripting 9. The Server-side Glide API 10. The Client-side Glide API 11. Server-side Scripting 12. Client-side Scripting 13. Debugging 14. Pro Tips

One-to-many relationships in ServiceNow


One-to-many relationships are one type of parent-child relationship. They consist of one parent record, that is linked to many child records. This linkage is done via database table keys.

As we briefly mentioned in a previous chapter, records have a primary key (PK), and a foreign key (FK) column. The PK in ServiceNow is the Sys ID. Every record in ServiceNow has a Sys ID that is unique within the entire database. An example of an FK column, is any column which is meant to hold the PK of another record. These fields are Reference fields in ServiceNow. The Incident [incident] table for example, contains an FK column with the label Assigned to, and an actual column name of assigned_to. This is a Reference field that points to the User [sys_user] table, and contains the PK (Sys ID) of one of the records in that table.

Note

When you look at one of these FK/Reference fields on a form, you'll see the display value of the record that the Sys ID it contains corresponds...

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