When you analyze (or re-analyze) a business rule, you run a check against the specified expression elements. If you are creating a new business rule or copying or editing existing rules, run a business rule analysis as a best practice to make sure the results are current and accurate.
Run business rule analysis to:
- Help determine if the expression statements are correctly written
- Refresh data results
- Help ensure your data is still in compliance based on the rule's passing threshold; for example, after you run the analysis, view results by drilling down to view passing and failing rows
Guidelines:
- Run an analysis if the Status column for the rule reads analysis reqd; generally after a rule has been added, modified, or after an EBR is copied into another entity.
- When you make a small change to a rule, the change is reflected immediately and you do not need to re-analyze the rule.
- Run a business rule analysis for a single rule, multiple rules, or for all ABRs in an attribute.
- As a best practice, it may be more efficient to use the Re-Analyze Updated Rules option once after multiple rules are modified instead of running a per-rule analysis (Re-Analyze Selected Rules) each time you edit a rule.
- You must Execute privileges for the rule to analyze it.
- After you run the analysis:
- Drill down to the rule's failing rows and/or values.
- Examine business rule compliance.
Analyze one or more business rules
To analyze one or more business rules
Analyze all ABRs in an attribute
To analyze all ABRs in an attribute