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Workday Workday-Pro-Integrations Exam Syllabus Topics:
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NEW QUESTION # 36
Refer to the scenario. You are configuring a Core Connector: Worker integration with the Data Initialization Service (DIS) enabled, scheduled to run once daily. The integration must extract only active worker records with changes to compensation, home address, or business title since the last 24 hours. It uses Workday's change detection to avoid full extracts.
During testing, the Core Connector: Worker DIS output unexpectedly includes terminated workers, even though the change detection date parameters are correctly defined for a Full-Diff extract. The requirements specify that only active workers should be included in the output.
What configuration step should you modify to ensure the integration excludes terminated workers?
- A. Configure Integration Transaction Log step to subscribe to everything except termination transactions.
- B. Configure Integration Population Eligibility step to filter out terminated employees.
- C. Configure Integration Attributes for Integration System step to enable Include Inactive Workers in Full File.
- D. Configure Integration Field Overrides step to use the correct Eligibility Criterion to filter out terminated employees.
Answer: B
Explanation:
This scenario addresses an issue where a Core Connector: Worker integration - with DIS enabled and Full- Diff mode configured - unexpectedly includes terminated workers in the output, despite a requirement to include only active workers.
The correct step to address this issue is the configuration of Integration Population Eligibility.
From the Workday Pro: Integrations - Core Connector Configuration Guide, the relevant extract states:
"The Integration Population Eligibility step allows users to define which workers or populations are eligible to be included in the integration output. This includes filtering by worker status, organization, supervisory org, or other eligibility criteria. If this is not configured to exclude terminated workers, the integration will include all workers who meet the event conditions, regardless of their current status." Even though the integration uses change detection and the correct launch parameters, Workday still considers any worker with a qualifying change, including those terminated, unless they are explicitly excluded via eligibility rules.
Therefore, to prevent terminated workers from appearing in the output, you must set a filter in the Integration Population Eligibility step to include only active workers (e.g., using Worker.Status = Active or similar criteria).
Incorrect Options Explained:
* A. Configure Integration Attributes... Include Inactive Workers in Full FileThis option would cause inactive (e.g., terminated) workers to be included when enabled. It doesn't help filter them out.
* B. Configure Integration Transaction Log... subscribe to everything except terminationSubscription controls which events trigger processing but does not control population eligibility. Terminated workers with address changes prior to termination could still appear if eligibility is not defined.
* D. Configure Integration Field Overrides... use Eligibility CriterionField Overrides change data mappings or formats, not population eligibility. It cannot exclude terminated workers.
References:
Workday Pro: Integrations Curriculum - Core Connector: Worker Configuration and Population Eligibility Workday Community: Integration System Configuration > Integration Population Eligibility Workday Training Materials: Core Connector Deployment Best Practices
NEW QUESTION # 37
What is a key function and primary benefit of using a Document Transformation Connector within the integration capabilities of Workday?
- A. It provides functionality for defining a business process to manage both the connector integrations and document transformations output files.
- B. It serves as the principal tool for establishing and maintaining secure connections of connector integrations with various external systems.
- C. It plays a crucial role in converting the XML outputs generated by connector integrations into diverse formats and allows for data formatting and validation.
- D. It enables the application of intricate calculations on Workday data before it is extracted by other integration tools for external transmission.
Answer: C
Explanation:
The Document Transformation Connector is used in Workday to process and reformat XML outputs - often from Core Connector or EIB integrations - into custom formats like CSV, JSON, or flattened XML.
"The primary role of the Document Transformation Connector is to apply XSLT-based formatting, data reorganization, and validation to the output of Workday integrations before delivery to downstream systems." This is especially useful when third-party vendors require a specific format not natively supported by the integration system.
Why the other options are incorrect:
* A. Managing business processes is not a DT Connector's function.
* B. Calculations are not the main purpose - that's more for Calculated Fields or Studio.
* D. While security is essential, secure connections are managed through Workday's integration system and transport configuration, not the DT connector.
Reference:Workday Pro: Document Transformation Overview - Use Cases for Document Transformation ConnectorWorkday Integration Community: Best Practices for XSLT and Output Formatting
NEW QUESTION # 38
Refer to the following XML and example transformed output to answer the question below.
Example transformed wd:Report_Entry output;
What is the XSLT syntax tor a template that matches onwd: Educationj3roup to produce the degree data in the above Transformed_Record example?
- A.

- B.

- C.

- D.

Answer: A
Explanation:
In Workday integrations, XSLT is used to transform XML data, such as the output from a web service- enabled report or EIB, into a desired format for third-party systems. In this scenario, you need to create an XSLT template that matches the wd:Education_Group element in the provided XML and transforms it to produce the degree data in the format shown in the Transformed_Record example. The goal is to output each degree (e.g., "California University MBA" and "Georgetown University B.S.") as a <Degree> element within a <Degrees> parent element.
Here's why option A is correct:
* Template Matching: The <xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group"> correctly targets the wd:
Education_Group element in the XML, which contains multiple wd:Education elements, each with a wd:Degree child, as shown in the XML snippet (e.g., <wd:Education>California University</wd:
Education><wd:Degree>MBA</wd:Degree>).
* Transformation Logic:
* <Degree> creates the outer <Degree> element for each education group, matching the structure in the Transformed_Record example (e.g., <Degree>California University MBA</Degree>).
* <xsl:copy><xsl:value-of select="*"/></xsl:copy> copies the content of the child elements (wd:
Education and wd:Degree) and concatenates their values into a single string. The select="*" targets all child elements of wd:Education_Group, and xsl:value-of outputs their text content (e.
g., "California University" and "MBA" become "California University MBA").
* This approach ensures that each wd:Education_Group is transformed into a single <Degree> element with the combined text of the wd:Education and wd:Degree values, matching the example output.
* Context and Output: The template operates on each wd:Education_Group, producing the nested structure shown in the Transformed_Record (e.g., <Degrees><Degree>CaliforniaUniversity MBA<
/Degree><Degree>Georgetown University B.S.</Degree></Degrees>), assuming a parent template or additional logic wraps the <Degree> elements in <Degrees>.
Why not the other options?
* B.
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group">
<Degree>
<xsl:value-of select="*"/>
</Degree>
</xsl:template>
This uses <xsl:value-of select="*"/> without <xsl:copy>, which outputs the concatenated text of all child elements but does not preserve any XML structure or formatting. It would produce plain text (e.g., "California UniversityMBACalifornia UniversityB.S.") without the proper <Degree> tags, failing to match the structured output in the example.
* C.
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group">
<Degree>
<xsl:copy select="*"/>
</Degree>
</xsl:template>
This uses <xsl:copy select="*"/>, but <xsl:copy> does not take a select attribute-it simply copies the current node. This would result in an invalid XSLT syntax and fail to produce the desired output, making it incorrect.
* D.
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group">
<Degree>
<xsl:copy-of select="*"/>
</Degree>
</xsl:template>
This uses <xsl:copy-of select="*"/>, which copies all child nodes (e.g., wd:Education and wd:Degree) as-is, including their element structure, resulting in output like <Degree><wd:Education>California University</wd:
Education><wd:Degree>MBA</wd:Degree></Degree>. This does not match the flattened, concatenated text format in the Transformed_Record example (e.g., <Degree>California University MBA</Degree>), making it incorrect.
To implement this in XSLT for a Workday integration:
* Use the template from option A to match wd:Education_Group, apply <xsl:copy><xsl:value-of select="
*"/></xsl:copy> to concatenate and output the wd:Education and wd:Degree values as a single
<Degree> element. This ensures the transformation aligns with the Transformed_Record example, producing the required format for the integration output.
References:
* Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide: Section on "XSLT Transformations for Workday Integrations"
- Details the use of <xsl:template>, <xsl:copy>, and <xsl:value-of> for transforming XML data, including handling grouped elements like wd:Education_Group.
* Workday EIB and Web Services Guide: Chapter on "XML and XSLT for Report Data" - Explains the structure of Workday XML (e.g., wd:Education_Group, wd:Education, wd:Degree) and how to use XSLT to transform education data into a flattened format.
* Workday Reporting and Analytics Guide: Section on "Web Service-Enabled Reports" - Covers integrating report outputs with XSLT for transformations, including examples of concatenating and restructuring data for third-party systems.
NEW QUESTION # 39
You are configuring an EIB that uses a custom report as its data source. When attempting to transfer ownership of the report to the Integration System User (ISU), the ISU does not appear as an option for new report owners. You confirm that the ISU already has the necessary access to the report data source and related fields.
Within the Custom Report Creation domain, which security configuration should you update to allow the ISU to appear as a valid report owner?
- A. Assign the ISSG to a row within the Integration Permissions table that has Put access enabled.
- B. Assign the ISSG to a row within the Report/Task Permissions table that has Modify access enabled.
- C. Assign the ISSG to a row within the Integration Permissions table that has Get access enabled.
- D. Assign the ISSG to a row within the Report/Task Permissions table that has View access enabled.
Answer: B
Explanation:
In Workday, for an Integration System User (ISU) to be selectable as a Custom Report Owner, the security group the ISU belongs to must have Modify access to custom reports.
From Workday's security configuration principle:
An ISU does not appear as a valid report owner unless its security group has Modify permission in the Report
/Task Permissions section of the Custom Report Creation domain security policy.
This is because report ownership requires write#level access over custom report objects.
Therefore, you must update the Report/Task Permissions table to include the ISSG with Modify access.
Options B, C, and D are incorrect because View or Get/Put do not provide report ownership capabilities.
References:Workday Pro: Integrations - Integration Security and Report Ownership RulesAdmin#Guide#Authentication#and#Security.pdf - Security Policies & Required Permissions Model
NEW QUESTION # 40
Your manager has asked for a value on their dashboard for how many days away the birthdays are of their direct reports. The format of the output should be [Worker's Name]'s birthday is in [X] days, where you must calculate the number of days until a Worker's next birthday. An example output is "Logan McNeil's birthday is in 103 days." Which calculated field functions do you need to accomplish this?
- A. Increment or Decrement Date, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text
- B. Date Difference, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text
- C. Format Date, Increment or Decrement Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text
- D. Build Date, Format Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text
Answer: B
Explanation:
Implementation:
D). Increment or Decrement Date, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text: Incorrect. Increment or Decrement Date can't directly calculate days to a future birthday without additional complexity; Date Difference is more appropriate.
Use Date Difference to calculate days from today to the next birthday (adjusting the year dynamically with additional logic if needed).
Apply Format Number to ensure the result is a clean integer.
Use Text Constant for static text ("'s birthday is in " and " days").
Use Concatenate Text to combine Worker Name, static text, and the formatted number.
Reference from Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide:
Workday Calculated Fields: Section on "Date Functions" explains Date Difference for calculating time spans.
Report Writer Fundamentals: Covers Concatenate Text and Text Constant for string building in reports.
Explanation:
The requirement is to create a calculated field for a dashboard that displays a worker's name and the number of days until their next birthday in the format "[Worker's Name]'s birthday is in [X] days" (e.g., "Logan McNeil's birthday is in 103 days"). This involves calculating the difference between today's date and the worker's next birthday, then formatting the output as a text string. Let's break down the necessary functions:
Date Difference:To calculate the number of days until the worker's next birthday, you need to determine the difference between the current date and the worker's birthdate in the current or next year (whichever is upcoming). The Date Difference function calculates the number of days between two dates. In this case:
Use the worker's "Date of Birth" field (from the Worker business object).
Adjust the year of the birthdate to the current year or next year (if the birthday has already passed this year) using additional logic.
Calculate the difference from today's date to this adjusted birthday date. For example, if today is February 21, 2025, and Logan's birthday is June 4 (adjusted to June 4, 2025), Date Difference returns 103 days.
Format Number:The result of Date Difference is a numeric value (e.g., 103). To ensure it displays cleanly in the output string (without decimals or unnecessary formatting), Format Number can be used to convert it to a simple integer string (e.g., "103").
Text Constant:To build the output string, static text like "'s birthday is in " and " days" is needed. The Text Constant function provides fixed text values to include in the final concatenated result.
Concatenate Text:The final step is to combine the worker's name (e.g., "Logan McNeil"), the static text, and the calculated days into one string. Concatenate Text merges multiple text values into a single output, such as "Logan McNeil" + "'s birthday is in " + "103" + " days".
Option Analysis:
A . Format Date, Increment or Decrement Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text: Incorrect. Format Date converts dates to strings but doesn't calculate differences. Increment or Decrement Date adjusts dates but isn't suited for finding days until a future event. Extract Single Instance is for multi-instance fields, not relevant here. Format Text adjusts text appearance, not numeric calculations.
B . Build Date, Format Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text: Incorrect. Build Date creates a date from components, useful for setting the next birthday, but lacks the difference calculation. Format Date and Extract Single Instance don't apply to the core need.
C . Date Difference, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text: Correct. These functions cover calculating the days, formatting the number, adding static text, and building the final string.
NEW QUESTION # 41
What is the task used to upload a new XSLT file for a pre-existing document transformation integration system?
- A. Edit Integration Attachment
- B. Edit Integration Attachment Service
- C. Edit XSLT Attachment Transformation
- D. Edit Integration Service Attachment
Answer: C
NEW QUESTION # 42
Refer to the following XML and example transformed output to answer the question below.
Example transformed wd:Report_Entry output;
What is the XSLT syntax tor a template that matches on wd: Educationj3roup to produce the degree data in the above Transformed_Record example?
- A.

- B.

- C.

- D.

Answer: D
Explanation:
In Workday integrations, XSLT is used to transform XML data, such as the output from a web service- enabled report or EIB, into a desired format for third-party systems. In this scenario, you need to create an XSLT template that matches the wd:Education_Group element in the provided XML and transforms it to produce the degree data in the format shown in the Transformed_Record example. The goal is to output each degree (e.g., "California University MBA" and "Georgetown University B.S.") as a <Degree> element within a <Degrees> parent element.
Here's why option A is correct:
* Template Matching: The <xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group"> correctly targets the wd:
Education_Group element in the XML, which contains multiple wd:Education elements, each with a wd:Degree child, as shown in the XML snippet (e.g., <wd:Education>California University</wd:
Education><wd:Degree>MBA</wd:Degree>).
* Transformation Logic:
* <Degree> creates the outer <Degree> element for each education group, matching the structure in the Transformed_Record example (e.g., <Degree>California University MBA</Degree>).
* <xsl:copy><xsl:value-of select="*"/></xsl:copy> copies the content of the child elements (wd:
Education and wd:Degree) and concatenates their values into a single string. The select="*" targets all child elements of wd:Education_Group, and xsl:value-of outputs their text content (e.
g., "California University" and "MBA" become "California University MBA").
* This approach ensures that each wd:Education_Group is transformed into a single <Degree> element with the combined text of the wd:Education and wd:Degree values, matching the example output.
* Context and Output: The template operates on each wd:Education_Group, producing the nested structure shown in the Transformed_Record (e.g., <Degrees><Degree>California University MBA<
/Degree><Degree>Georgetown University B.S.</Degree></Degrees>), assuming a parent template or additional logic wraps the <Degree> elements in <Degrees>.
Why not the other options?
* B.
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group">
<Degree>
<xsl:value-of select="*"/>
</Degree>
</xsl:template>
This uses <xsl:value-of select="*"/> without <xsl:copy>, which outputs the concatenated text of all child elements but does not preserve any XML structure or formatting. It would produce plain text (e.g., "California UniversityMBACalifornia UniversityB.S.") without the proper <Degree> tags, failing to match the structured output in the example.
* C.
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group">
<Degree>
<xsl:copy select="*"/>
</Degree>
</xsl:template>
This uses <xsl:copy select="*"/>, but <xsl:copy> does not take a select attribute-it simply copies the current node. This would result in an invalid XSLT syntax and fail to produce the desired output, making it incorrect.
* D.
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="wd:Education_Group">
<Degree>
<xsl:copy-of select="*"/>
</Degree>
</xsl:template>
This uses <xsl:copy-of select="*"/>, which copies all child nodes (e.g., wd:Education and wd:Degree) as-is, including their element structure, resulting in output like <Degree><wd:Education>California University</wd:
Education><wd:Degree>MBA</wd:Degree></Degree>. This does not match the flattened, concatenated text format in the Transformed_Record example (e.g., <Degree>California University MBA</Degree>), making it incorrect.
To implement this in XSLT for a Workday integration:
* Use the template from option A to match wd:Education_Group, apply <xsl:copy><xsl:value-of select="
*"/></xsl:copy> to concatenate and output the wd:Education and wd:Degree values as a single
<Degree> element. This ensures the transformation aligns with the Transformed_Record example, producing the required format for the integration output.
Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide: Section on "XSLT Transformations for Workday Integrations" - Details the use of <xsl:template>, <xsl:copy>, and <xsl:value-of> for transforming XML data, including handling grouped elements like wd:Education_Group.
Workday EIB and Web Services Guide: Chapter on "XML and XSLT for Report Data" - Explains the structure of Workday XML (e.g., wd:Education_Group, wd:Education, wd:Degree) and how to use XSLT to transform education data into a flattened format.
Workday Reporting and Analytics Guide: Section on "Web Service-Enabled Reports" - Covers integrating report outputs with XSLT for transformations, including examples of concatenating and restructuring data for third-party systems.
NEW QUESTION # 43
Which three features must all XSLT files contain to be considered valid?
- A. A template, a prefix, and a header
- B. A header, a footer, and a namespace
- C. A root element, namespace, and at least one transformation
- D. A root element, namespace, and at least one template
Answer: D
Explanation:
For an XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations) file to be considered valid in the context of Workday integrations (and per general XSLT standards), it must adhere to specific structural and functional requirements. The correct answer is that an XSLT file must contain a root element, a namespace, and at least one template. Below is a detailed explanation of why this is the case, grounded in Workday's integration practices and XSLT specifications:
Root Element:
Every valid XSLT file must have a single root element, which serves as the top-level container for the stylesheet. In XSLT, this is typically the <xsl:stylesheet> or <xsl:transform> element (both are interchangeable, though <xsl:stylesheet> is more common).
The root element defines the structure of the XSLT document and encapsulates all other elements, such as templates and namespaces. Without a root element, the file would not conform to XML well-formedness rules, which are a prerequisite for XSLT validity.
Example:
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform">
</xsl:stylesheet>
Namespace:
An XSLT file must declare the XSLT namespace, typically http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform, to identify it as an XSLT stylesheet and enable the processor to recognize XSLT-specific elements (e.g., <xsl:template>, <xsl:value-of>). This is declared within the root element using the xmlns:xsl attribute.
The namespace ensures that the elements used in the stylesheet are interpreted as XSLT instructions rather than arbitrary XML. Without this namespace, the file would not function as an XSLT stylesheet, as the processor would not know how to process its contents.
In Workday's Document Transformation integrations, additional namespaces (e.g., for Workday-specific schemas) may also be included, but the XSLT namespace is mandatory for validity.
At Least One Template:
An XSLT file must contain at least one <xsl:template> element to define the transformation logic. Templates are the core mechanism by which XSLT processes input XML and produces output. They specify rules for matching nodes in the source XML (via the match attribute) and generating the transformed result.
Without at least one template, the stylesheet would lack any transformation capability, rendering it functionally invalid for its intended purpose. Even a minimal XSLT file requires a template to produce meaningful output, though built-in default templates exist, they are insufficient for custom transformations like those used in Workday.
Example:
<xsl:template match="/">
<result>Hello, Workday!</result>
</xsl:template>
Complete Minimal Valid XSLT Example:
<xsl:stylesheet version="1.0" xmlns:xsl="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform">
<xsl:template match="/">
<output>Transformed Data</output>
</xsl:template>
</xsl:stylesheet>
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
A . A root element, namespace, and at least one transformation: While this is close, "transformation" is not a precise term in XSLT. The correct requirement is a "template," which defines the transformation logic. "Transformation" might imply the overall process, but the specific feature required in the file is a template.
C . A header, a footer, and a namespace: XSLT files do not require a "header" or "footer." These terms are not part of XSLT or XML standards. The structure is defined by the root element and templates, not headers or footers, making this option invalid.
D . A template, a prefix, and a header: While a template is required, "prefix" (likely referring to the namespace prefix like xsl:) is not a standalone feature-it's part of the namespace declaration within the root element. "Header" is not a required component, making this option incorrect.
Workday Context:
In Workday's Document Transformation systems (e.g., Core Connectors or custom integrations), XSLT files are uploaded as attachment transformations. Workday enforces these requirements to ensure the stylesheets can process XML data (e.g., from Workday reports or connectors) into formats suitable for external systems. The Workday platform validates these components when an XSLT file is uploaded, rejecting files that lack a root element, namespace, or functional templates.
Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide Reference:
Workday Integration System Fundamentals: Describes the structure of XSLT files, emphasizing the need for a root element (<xsl:stylesheet>), the XSLT namespace, and templates as the building blocks of transformation logic.
Document Transformation Module: Details the requirements for uploading valid XSLT files in Workday, including examples that consistently feature a root element, namespace declaration, and at least one template (e.g., "XSLT Basics for Document Transformation").
Core Connectors and Document Transformation Course Manual: Provides sample XSLT files used in labs, all of which include these three components to ensure functionality within Workday integrations.
Workday Community Documentation: Reinforces that XSLT files must be well-formed XML with an XSLT namespace and at least one template to be processed correctly by Workday's integration engine.
NEW QUESTION # 44
Refer to the scenario. You are configuring a Core Connector: Worker integration with the Data Initialization Service (DIS) enabled. The integration must extract worker contact details and job information, including a calculated field override that determines phone allowance eligibility.
When testing, you run the Test Security Related Action from the Configure Integration Field Override step. Several field overrides display "No" in the Available by User column.
To ensure the ISSG has access to these field overrides and that "Yes" is displayed in the Test Security step, what configuration should you review?
- A. Provide the ISSG View permissions to the domain security policies securing each overridden field.
- B. Identify the domain security policies securing the field overrides and grant Modify permissions.
- C. Grant View permissions to the ISSG for the domain security policies that secure the web service operations.
- D. Assign the ISSG to the domain security policies that govern the web service operations with Get access.
Answer: A
Explanation:
The Test Security Related Action shows Available by User = No when the security group running the integration lacks View permissions to the fields used in the override logic.
From Workday documentation:
Field Overrides require the ISSG to have View access to the domain policies securing each field referenced in the override, otherwise Workday blocks the field from execution.
Therefore, the appropriate fix is to:
* Identify the domains that secure the calculated fields and overridden fields
* Grant the ISSG View access in those domain security policies
* Activate pending changes
Options B and C incorrectly focus only on web service operations.
Option D incorrectly suggests Modify access - but View is the required minimum.
NEW QUESTION # 45
What are the two valid data source options for an Outbound EIB?
- A. Custom Report or Workday Web Service
- B. Custom Report or Business Process
- C. XpressO Report or Custom Report
- D. Web Service or Business Process
Answer: A
Explanation:
An Outbound EIB (Enterprise Interface Builder) requires a data source to extract information from Workday. The two valid data source types are:
Custom Report (Advanced or Simple)
Workday Web Service (WWS)
From Workday documentation:
"Outbound EIBs support either a Custom Report marked as Web Service Enabled, or a Workday Public Web Service (WWS) operation, as the data source." Custom Reports allow user-defined data with filtering.
Web Services allow access to standard operations like Get_Workers.
Why the other options are incorrect:
A . Business Process is not a data source type.
B . XpressO Reports are not supported for integrations.
C . Business Processes cannot feed EIBs directly as data sources.
NEW QUESTION # 46
Refer to the following XML to answer the question below.
Within the template which matches on wd:Report_Entry, you would like to conditionally process the wd:
Education_Group elements by using an <xsl:apply-templates> element. What XPath syntax would be used for the select to iterate over only the wd:Education_Group elements where the Degree is an MBA?
- A. wd:Education_Group/wd:Degree='MBA'
- B. wd:Report_Entry/wd:Education_Group[wd:Degree='MBA' 1:Degree='MBA']
- C. wd:Report_Entry/wd:Education_Group/wd:Degree='MBA' 1:Degree='MBA'
- D. wd:Education_Group[wd:Degree='MBA']
Answer: D
Explanation:
In Workday integrations, XSLT is used to transform XML data, such as the output from a web service- enabled report or EIB, into a desired format for third-party systems. In this scenario, you need to write XSLT to process wd:Education_Group elements within a template matching wd:Report_Entry, using an <xsl:apply- templates> element to iterate only over wd:Education_Group elements where the wd:Degree is "MBA." The correct XPath syntax for the select attribute is critical to ensure accurate filtering.
Here's why option A is correct:
* XPath Syntax Explanation: In XPath, square brackets [ ] are used to specify predicates or conditions to filter elements. The condition wd:Degree='MBA' checks if the wd:Degree child element has the value "MBA." When applied to wd:Education_Group, the expression wd:Education_Group[wd:
Degree='MBA'] selects only those wd:Education_Group elements that contain a wd:Degree child element with the value "MBA."
* Context in XSLT: Within an <xsl:apply-templates> element in a template matching wd:Report_Entry, the select attribute uses XPath to specify which nodes to process. This syntax ensures that the template only applies to wd:Education_Group elements where the degree is "MBA," aligning with the requirement to conditionally process only those specific education groups.
* XML Structure Alignment: Based on the provided XML snippet, wd:Education_Group contains wd:
Education and wd:Degree child elements (e.g., <wd:Degree>MBA</wd:Degree>). The XPath wd:
Education_Group[wd:Degree='MBA'] correctly navigates to wd:Education_Group and filters based on the wd:Degree value, matching the structure and requirement.
Why not the other options?
* B. wd:Education_Group/wd:Degree='MBA': This is not a valid XPath expression for a predicate. It attempts to navigate to wd:Degree as a child but does not use square brackets [ ] to create a filtering condition. This would be interpreted as selecting wd:Degree elements under wd:Education_Group, but it wouldn't filter based on the value "MBA" correctly within an <xsl:apply-templates> context.
* C. wd:Report_Entry/wd:Education_Group/wd:Degree='MBA' 1:Degree='MBA': This is syntactically incorrect and unclear. It includes a malformed condition (1:Degree='MBA') and does not use proper XPath predicate syntax. It fails to filter wd:Education_Group elements based on wd:
Degree='MBA' and is not valid for use in select.
* D. wd:Report_Entry/wd:Education_Group[wd:Degree='MBA' 1:Degree='MBA']: This is also syntactically incorrect due to the inclusion of 1:Degree='MBA' within the predicate. The 1: prefix is not valid XPath syntax and introduces an error. The correct predicate should only be wd:Degree='MBA' to filter the wd:Education_Group elements.
To implement this in XSLT:
* Within your template matching wd:Report_Entry, you would write an <xsl:apply-templates> element with the select attribute set to wd:Education_Group[wd:Degree='MBA']. This ensures that only wd:
Education_Group elements with a wd:Degree value of "MBA" are processed by the corresponding templates, effectively filtering out other degrees (e.g., B.S., B.A.) in the transformation.
This approach ensures the XSLT transformation aligns with Workday's XML structure and integration requirements for processing education data in a report output.
References:
* Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide: Section on "XSLT Transformations for Workday Integrations"
- Details the use of XPath in XSLT for filtering XML elements, including predicates for conditional processing based on child element values.
* Workday EIB and Web Services Guide: Chapter on "XML and XSLT for Report Data" - Explains the structure of Workday XML (e.g., wd:Education_Group, wd:Degree) and how to use XPath to navigate and filter data.
* Workday Reporting and Analytics Guide: Section on "Web Service-Enabled Reports" - Covers integrating report outputs with XSLT for transformations, including examples of filtering elements based on specific values like degree types.
NEW QUESTION # 47
You are creating an outbound connector using the Core Connector: Organization Outbound template. The vendor has provided the following requirements for how the data should appear in the output file.
The vendor would also like to change the default document retention policy of 30 days to 7 days. What tasks do you need to use to configure this in your connector?
- A. Configure Integration Field Overrides and Configure Integration Field Attributes
- B. Configure Integration Maps and Configure Integration Attributes
- C. Configure Integration Field Overrides and Configure Integration Attributes
- D. Configure Integration Maps and Configure Integration Field Attributes
Answer: C
Explanation:
When creating an outbound connector using the Workday Core Connector: Organization Outbound template, you need to configure the connector to meet specific vendor requirements, such as formatting output data and adjusting document retention policies. Let's break down the question and analyze the requirements and options based on Workday's integration framework, specifically focusing on the Core Connector and its configuration tasks.
Understanding the Requirements
* Output Data Formatting:The vendor has provided a table specifying how organization types should appear in the output file (e.g., Cost Center as "CC", Pay Group as "PAY", Supervisory as "S", and any other value as "OTHER"). This indicates a need to transform or map Workday organization data into specific output values, which is typically handled by configuring how fields are processed or mapped in the integration.
* Document Retention Policy Change:The vendor wants to change the default document retention policy from 30 days to 7 days. In Workday, document retention policies for integrations (e.g., files stored on SFTP or other delivery methods) are managed through integration settings, specifically attributes related to file retention or delivery options.
Analyzing Workday Core Connector: Organization Outbound
The Core Connector: Organization Outbound template is a pre-built Workday integration template used to extract organization-related data (e.g., cost centers, pay groups, supervisory organizations) and sendit to an external system. It leverages Workday's integration framework, including integration maps, field overrides, and attributes, to customize data output and behavior.
* Integration Maps: Used to define how data is transformed or mapped from Workday to the output format, often involving XSLT or predefined mappings.
* Integration Field Overrides: Allow you to override or customize how specific fields are displayed or formatted in the output, such as mapping "Cost Center" to "CC" as per the vendor's table.
* Integration Attributes: Control broader integration settings, such as delivery methods, file formats, and retention policies (e.g., document retention duration).
* Integration Field Attributes: Typically focus on specific field-level properties but are less commonly used for retention policies or broad mappings compared to the above options.
Evaluating the Vendor's Output Requirements
The table provided (Cost Center # "CC", Pay Group # "PAY", Supervisory # "S", any other value #
"OTHER") suggests a need to transform or override the default output values for organization types. This is a field-level customization, best handled byIntegration Field Overrides, which allow you to specify custom values or formats for specific fields in the output.
* For example, in the Core Connector, you can use Integration Field Overrides to map the Workday organization type (e.g., "Cost_Center") to the vendor's desired output ("CC"). This is a common practice for outbound integrations where external systems require specific formatting.
Evaluating the Retention Policy Change
The default document retention policy of 30 days needs to be changed to 7 days. In Workday, retention policies for integration output files (e.g., files delivered via SFTP or email) are configured as part of the integration's attributes, not field-level settings.
* Integration Attributesare used to manage integration-wide settings, including delivery options, file retention periods, and other global configurations. You can specify the retention period (e.g., 7 days) in the attributes section of the Core Connector configuration.
* This is distinct from field-level overrides or maps, as retention is not tied to individual data fields but to the integration's output management.
Analyzing the Options
Now, let's evaluate each option to determine which tasks are needed to meet both requirements:
* A. Configure Integration Maps and Configure Integration Attributes
* Integration Maps: These are used for broader data transformations or mappings, such as converting Workday XML to another format or defining complex data relationships. While they could theoretically handle the output value mappings (e.g., Cost Center # "CC"), they are typically more complex and less granular than field overrides for simple value changes.
* Integration Attributes: Correct for configuring the retention policy (e.g., changing from 30 to 7 days), as attributes manage integration-wide settings like retention.
* Why Not Sufficient?: Integration Maps are overkill for simple field value overrides like the vendor's table, and field-level customization is better handled by Integration Field Overrides for precision and ease.
* B. Configure Integration Field Overrides and Configure Integration Field Attributes
* Integration Field Overrides: Correct for mapping specific field values (e.g., Cost Center #
"CC"), as they allow granular control over output formats for individual fields.
* Integration Field Attributes: These are less commonly used and typically focus on field- specific properties (e.g., data type, length), not broad integration settings like retention policies.
Retention is not managed at the field level, so this is incorrect for the retention requirement.
* Why Not Sufficient?: Integration Field Attributes do not handle retention policies, making this option incomplete.
* C. Configure Integration Field Overrides and Configure Integration Attributes
* Integration Field Overrides: Perfect for mapping the vendor's output values (e.g., Cost Center #
"CC", Pay Group # "PAY", etc.), as they allow precise control over field-level output formatting.
* Integration Attributes: Correct for configuring the retention policy (e.g., changing from 30 to 7 days), as attributes manage integration-wide settings like file retention.
* Why Sufficient?: This combination addresses both requirements-field-level output formatting and integration-wide retention policy changes-making it the most accurate choice.
* D. Configure Integration Maps and Configure Integration Field Attributes
* Integration Maps: As explained, these are better for complex transformations, not simple field value overrides like the vendor's table. They could work but are less efficient than field overrides.
* Integration Field Attributes: As noted, these do not handle retention policies or broad integration settings, making them incorrect for the retention requirement.
* Why Not Sufficient?: This combination fails to address retention effectively and uses Integration Maps when Integration Field Overrides would be more appropriate for the output formatting.
Conclusion
Based on the analysis, the vendor's requirements for output formatting (mapping organization types to specific values) and changing the retention policy (from 30 to 7 days) are best met by:
* Integration Field Overrides: To customize the output values for organization types (e.g., Cost Center
# "CC") as shown in the table.
* Integration Attributes: To adjust the document retention policy from 30 days to 7 days.
NEW QUESTION # 48
You have been asked to refine a report which outputs one row per worker and is being used in an integration that sends worker data to one of your third-party systems. The integration should only send workers who have been hired in the last 30 days. Where in the custom report definition can you specify a condition that would include only workers who have been hired in the last 30 days?
- A. Columns
- B. Subfilter
- C. Output
- D. Filter
Answer: D
Explanation:
In Workday, when refining a custom report to include specific conditions such as limiting the output to workers hired in the last 30 days, the appropriate place to specify this condition is within theFiltertab of the custom report definition. The Filter tab allows you to define criteria that determine which instances of the primary business object (in this case, "Worker") are included in the report output. This is critical for integrations, as the filtered data ensures that only relevant records are sent to the third-party system.
The requirement here is to restrict the report to workers hired within the last 30 days. In Workday reporting, this can be achieved by adding a filter condition on the "Hire Date" field of the Worker business object.
Specifically, you would configure the filter to compare the "Hire Date" against a dynamic date range, such as
"Current Date minus 30 days" to "Current Date." This ensures the report dynamically adjusts to include only workers hired in the last 30 days each time it runs, which aligns with the needs of an integration sending real- time data to a third-party system.
Here's why the other options are incorrect:
* A. Subfilter: Subfilters in Workday are used to further refine data within a related business object or a subset of data already filtered by the primary filter. They are not the primary mechanism for applying a condition to the main dataset (e.g., all workers). For this scenario, asubfilter would be unnecessary since the condition applies directly to the Worker business object, not a related object.
* B. Output: The Output section of a custom report definition controls how the report is displayed or delivered (e.g., file format, scheduling), not the data selection criteria. It does not allow for specifying conditions like hire date ranges.
* C. Columns: The Columns tab defines which fields are displayed in the report output (e.g., Worker ID, Name, Hire Date). While you can add the "Hire Date" field here for visibility, it does not control which workers are included in the report-that is the role of the Filter tab.
To implement this in practice:
* In the custom report definition, go to theFiltertab.
* Add a new filter condition.
* Select the "Hire Date" field from the Worker business object.
* Set the operator to "in the range" and define the range as "Current Date - 30 days" to "Current Date" (using dynamic date functions available in Workday).
* Save and test the report to ensure it returns only workers hired within the last 30 days.
This filtered report can then be enabled as a web service (via the Advanced tab) or used in an Enterprise Interface Builder (EIB) or Workday Studio integration to send the data to the third-party system, meeting the integration requirement.
References from Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide:
* Workday Report Writer Fundamentals: Section on "Creating and Managing Filters" explains how filters are used to limit report data based on specific conditions, such as date ranges.
* Integration System Fundamentals: Discusses how custom reports serve as data sources for integrations and the importance of filters in defining the dataset.
* Core Connectors & Document Transformation: Highlights the use of filtered custom reports in outbound integrations to third-party systems.
NEW QUESTION # 49
Refer to the following scenario to answer the question below.
You have been asked to build an integration using the Core Connector: Worker template and should leverage the Data Initialization Service (DIS). The integration will be used to export a full file (no change detection) for employees only and will include personal data.
What configuration is required to output the value of a calculated field which you created for inclusion in this integration?
- A. Configure Integration Field Attributes.
- B. Configure Integration Maps.
- C. Configure Integration Field Overrides.
- D. Configure Integration Attributes.
Answer: C
Explanation:
The scenario involves a Core Connector: Worker integration using the Data Initialization Service (DIS) to export a full file of employee personal data, with a requirement to include a calculated field in the output. Core Connectors rely on predefined field mappings, but custom calculated fields need specific configuration to be included. Let's analyze the solution:
Requirement:Output the value of a calculated field created for this integration. In Workday, calculated fields are custom-built (e.g., using Report Writer or Calculated Fields) and not part of the standard Core Connector template, so they must be explicitly added to the output.
Integration Field Overrides:In Core Connectors, Integration Field Overrides allow you to replace a delivered field's value or add a new field to the output by mapping it to a calculated field. This is the standard method to include custom calculated fields in the integration file. You create the calculated field separately, then use overrides to specify where its value appears in the output structure (e.g., as a new column or replacing an existing field).
Option Analysis:
A . Configure Integration Field Attributes: Incorrect. Integration Field Attributes refine how delivered fields are output (e.g., filtering multi-instance data like phone type), but they don't support adding or mapping calculated fields.
B . Configure Integration Field Overrides: Correct. This configuration maps the calculated field to the output, ensuring its value is included in the exported file.
C . Configure Integration Attributes: Incorrect. Integration Attributes define integration-level settings (e.g., file name, delivery protocol), not field-specific outputs like calculated fields.
D . Configure Integration Maps: Incorrect. Integration Maps transform existing field values (e.g., "Married" to "M"), but they don't add new fields or directly output calculated fields.
Implementation:
Create the calculated field in Workday (e.g., via Create Calculated Field task).
Edit the Core Connector: Worker integration.
Navigate to the Integration Field Overrides section.
Add a new override, selecting the calculated field and specifying its output position (e.g., a new field ID or overriding an existing one).
Test the integration to confirm the calculated field value appears in the output file.
Reference from Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide:
Core Connectors & Document Transformation: Section on "Configuring Integration Field Overrides" explains how to include calculated fields in Core Connector outputs.
Integration System Fundamentals: Notes the use of overrides for custom data in predefined integration templates.
NEW QUESTION # 50
Your manager has asked for a value on their dashboard for how many days away the birthdays are of their direct reports. The format of the output should be [Worker's Name]'s birthday is in [X] days, where you must calculate the number of days until a Worker's next birthday. An example output is "Logan McNeil's birthday is in 103 days." Which calculated field functions do you need to accomplish this?
- A. Increment or Decrement Date, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text
- B. Date Difference, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text
- C. Format Date, Increment or Decrement Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text
- D. Build Date, Format Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text
Answer: B
Explanation:
The requirement is to create a calculated field for a dashboard that displays a worker's name and the number of days until their next birthday in the format "[Worker's Name]'s birthday is in [X] days" (e.g., "Logan McNeil's birthday is in 103 days"). This involves calculating the difference between today's date and the worker's next birthday, then formatting the output as a text string. Let's break down the necessary functions:
* Date Difference:To calculate the number of days until the worker's next birthday, you need to determine the difference between the current date and the worker's birthdate in the current or next year (whichever is upcoming). The Date Difference function calculates the number of days between two dates. In this case:
* Use the worker's "Date of Birth" field (from the Worker business object).
* Adjust the year of the birthdate to the current year or next year (if the birthday has already passed this year) using additional logic.
* Calculate the difference from today's date to this adjusted birthday date. For example, if today is February 21, 2025, and Logan's birthday is June 4 (adjusted to June 4, 2025), Date Difference returns 103 days.
* Format Number:The result of Date Difference is a numeric value (e.g., 103). To ensure it displays cleanly in the output string (without decimals or unnecessary formatting), Format Number can be used to convert it to a simple integer string (e.g., "103").
* Text Constant:To build the output string, static text like "'s birthday is in " and " days" is needed. The Text Constant function provides fixed text values to include in the final concatenated result.
* Concatenate Text:The final step is to combine the worker's name (e.g., "Logan McNeil"), the static text, and the calculated days into one string. Concatenate Text merges multiple text values into a single output, such as "Logan McNeil" + "'s birthday is in " + "103" + " days".
* Option Analysis:
* A. Format Date, Increment or Decrement Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text:
Incorrect. Format Date converts dates to strings but doesn't calculate differences. Increment or Decrement Date adjusts dates but isn't suited for finding days until a future event. Extract Single Instance is for multi-instance fields, not relevant here. Format Text adjusts text appearance, not numeric calculations.
* B. Build Date, Format Date, Extract Single Instance, Format Text: Incorrect. Build Date creates a date from components, useful for setting the next birthday, but lacks the difference calculation. Format Date and Extract Single Instance don't apply to the core need.
* C. Date Difference, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text: Correct. These functions cover calculating the days, formatting the number, adding static text, and building the final string.
* D. Increment or Decrement Date, Format Number, Text Constant, Concatenate Text:
Incorrect. Increment or Decrement Date can't directly calculate days to a future birthday without additional complexity; Date Difference is more appropriate.
* Implementation:
* UseDate Differenceto calculate days from today to the next birthday (adjusting the year dynamically with additional logic if needed).
* ApplyFormat Numberto ensure the result is a clean integer.
* UseText Constantfor static text ("'s birthday is in " and " days").
* UseConcatenate Textto combine Worker Name, static text, and the formatted number.
References from Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide:
* Workday Calculated Fields: Section on "Date Functions" explains Date Difference for calculating time spans.
* Report Writer Fundamentals: Covers Concatenate Text and Text Constant for string building in reports.
NEW QUESTION # 51
Refer to the following scenario to answer the question below.
You have configured a Core Connector: Worker integration, which utilizes the following basic configuration:
* Integration field attributes are configured to output the Position Title and Business Title fields from the Position Data section.
* Integration Population Eligibility uses the field Is Manager which returns true if the worker holds a manager role.
* Transaction Log service has been configured to Subscribe to specific Transaction Types: Position Edit Event.
You launch your integration with the following date launch parameters (Date format of MM/DD/YYYY):
* As of Entry Moment: 05/25/2024 12:00:00 AM * Effective Date: 05/25/2024
* Last Successful As of Entry Moment: 05/23/2024 12:00:00 AM
* Last Successful Effective Date: 05/23/2024
To test your integration, you made a change to a worker named Jared Ellis who is assigned to the manager role for the IT Help Desk department. You use the Change Business Title related action on Jared and update the Business Title of the position to a new value. Jared Ellis' worker history shows the Title Change Event as being successfully completed with an effective date of 05/24/2024 and an Entry Moment of 05/24/2024 07:58:
53 AM however Jared Ellis does not show up in your output. What configuration element would have to be modified for the integration to include Jared Ellis in the output?
- A. Transaction log subscription
- B. Integration Field Attributes
- C. Integration Population Eligibility
- D. Date launch parameters
Answer: A
Explanation:
The scenario involves a Core Connector: Worker integration configured to output Position Title and Business Title fields for workers who meet the Integration Population Eligibility criteria (Is Manager = true), with the Transaction Log service subscribed to the "Position Edit Event." The integration is launched with specific date parameters, and a test is performed by updating Jared Ellis' Business Title using the "Change Business Title" related action. Jared is a manager, and the change is logged with an effective date of 05/24/2024 and an entry moment of 05/24/2024 07:58:53 AM. Despite this, Jared does not appear in the output. Let's determine why and identify the configuration element that needs modification.
In Workday, the Core Connector: Worker integration uses the Transaction Log service to detect changes based on subscribed transaction types. The subscribed transaction type in this case is "Position Edit Event," which is triggered when a position is edited via the "Edit Position" business process. However, the test scenario involves a "Change Business Title" related action, which is a distinct business process in Workday.
This action updates the Business Title field but does not necessarily trigger a "Position Edit Event." Instead, it generates a different event type, such as a "Title Change Event" (as noted in Jared's worker history), depending on how the system logs the action.
The date launch parameters provided are:
* As of Entry Moment:05/25/2024 12:00:00 AM - The latest point for entry moments.
* Effective Date:05/25/2024 - The latest effective date for changes.
* Last Successful As of Entry Moment:05/23/2024 12:00:00 AM - The starting point for entry moments from the last run.
* Last Successful Effective Date:05/23/2024 - The starting point for effective dates from the last run.
Jared's change has:
* Entry Moment:05/24/2024 07:58:53 AM - Falls between 05/23/2024 12:00:00 AM and 05/25/2024 12:
00:00 AM.
* Effective Date:05/24/2024 - Falls between 05/23/2024 and 05/25/2024.
The date parameters correctly cover the time window of Jared's change, meaning the issue is not with the date range but with the event detection logic. The Transaction Log subscription determines which events are processed by the integration. Since the subscription is set to "Position Edit Event" and the change was made via "Change Business Title" (logged as a "Title Change Event"), the integration does not recognize this event because it is not subscribed to the appropriate transaction type.
To include Jared Ellis in the output, theTransaction Log subscriptionmust be modified to include the event type associated with the "Change Business Title" action, such as "Title Change Event" or a broader category like "Position Related Event" that encompasses both position edits and title changes. This ensures the integration captures the specific update made to Jared's Business Title.
Let's evaluate the other options:
* B. Date launch parameters:The parameters already include Jared's entry moment and effective date within the specified ranges (05/23/2024 to 05/25/2024). Adjusting these would not address the mismatch between the subscribed event type and the actual event triggered.
* C. Integration Field Attributes:These are set to output Position Title and Business Title, and the change to Business Title is within scope. The field configuration is correct and does not need modification.
* D. Integration Population Eligibility:This is set to "Is Manager = true," and Jared is a manager. This filter is functioning as intended and is not the issue.
The root cause is the Transaction Log subscription not aligning with the event type generated by the "Change Business Title" action, makingA. Transaction log subscriptionthe correct answer.
Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide References
* Workday Integrations Study Guide: Core Connector: Worker- Section on "Transaction Log Configuration" explains how subscribing to specific transaction types filters the events processed by the integration.
* Workday Integrations Study Guide: Change Detection- Details how different business processes (e.g., Edit Position vs. Change Business Title) generate distinct event types in the Transaction Log.
* Workday Integrations Study Guide: Event Subscription- Notes the importance of aligning subscription types with the specific business actions being tested or monitored.
NEW QUESTION # 52
What is the workflow to upload an XSLT file for a brand new Document Transformation system?
- A. Create Integration Attachment Service, then Configure Integration Attachment Service
- B. Configure XSLT Attachment Transformation, then Create Integration Attachment Service
- C. Create XSLT Attachment Transformation, then Configure Integration Attachment Service
- D. Configure Integration Attachment Service, then Create Integration Service Attachment
Answer: C
Explanation:
In the Workday Pro Integrations program, the process of uploading an XSLT file for a brand-new Document Transformation system follows a specific workflow designed to ensure the transformation logic is properly attached and configured within the integration system. The correct sequence involves first creating the XSLT Attachment Transformation and then configuring the Integration Attachment Service to utilize it. Here's a step-by-step breakdown based on Workday's integration methodology:
* Create XSLT Attachment Transformation:
* The initial step is to create an XSLT Attachment Transformation object within Workday. This involves uploading the XSLT file, which contains the transformation logic needed to convert XML data into the desired format for the Document Transformation system. In Workday, XSLT (Extensible Stylesheet Language Transformations) is used to define how data from a source (typically in XML format) is transformed into an output format compatible with an external system.
* To do this, you navigate to the Integration System, access the related actions, and select the option to create a new "XSLT Attachment Transformation." You then name the transformation, upload the XSLT file (with a size limit of 30 MB as per Workday specifications), and save it.
This step establishes the transformation logic as an object that can be referenced by the integration system.
* Configure Integration Attachment Service:
* Once the XSLT Attachment Transformation is created, the next step is to configure the Integration Attachment Service to incorporate this transformation. The Integration Attachment Service is a component of the Document Transformation system that handles the delivery or processing of the transformed data.
* In this step, you edit the integration system, navigate to the "Services" tab, and configure the Integration Attachment Service. Here, you specify the previously created XSLT Attachment Transformation as the transformation to be applied. This links the XSLT logic to the integration workflow, ensuring that the data processed by the Document Transformation system is transformed according to the uploaded XSLT file.
Why Other Options Are Incorrect:
* A. Configure XSLT Attachment Transformation, then Create Integration Attachment Service:
This is incorrect because you cannot "configure" an XSLT Attachment Transformation before it exists.
It must first be created as an object in Workday before any configuration or association with services can occur.
* C. Create Integration Attachment Service, then Configure Integration Attachment Service: This option skips the creation of the XSLT Attachment Transformation entirely, which is a critical step.
Without the transformation defined, configuring the service alone would not enable the XSLT upload or its functionality.
* D. Configure Integration Attachment Service, then Create Integration Service Attachment: This sequence is reversed and misleading. The Integration Attachment Service must be configured to use an existing XSLT Attachment Transformation, not the other way around. Additionally, "Create Integration Service Attachment" is not a standard term in this context within Workday documentation.
Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide References:
* Workday Integration System Fundamentals: This section outlines the components of an integration system, including the use of XSLT for document transformation and the role of attachment services.
* Document Transformation Module: Specifically details the process of uploading and applying XSLT files, emphasizing the creation of an XSLT Attachment Transformation followed by its configuration within the integration services.
* Core Connectors and Document Transformation Course Manual: Provides practical steps for setting up transformations, including the sequence of creating and then configuring transformation attachments (e.g., Activities related to "Upload a Custom XSLT Transformation" and "Edit XSLT Attachment Transformation").
* Workday Community Documentation: Confirms that XSLT files are uploaded as attachment transformations and then linked to services like the Integration Attachment Service for processing.
NEW QUESTION # 53
......
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