
Explanation:
* In line 12, declare "Job Task" as a variable. = NO
* Add the property FieldClass = FlowField; for field 3. = YES
* Add the property FieldClass = FlowFilter; for field 3. = NO
* In line 23, assign the "User Setup" table to a field. = YES
For "In line 12, declare 'Job Task' as a variable": In the AL code provided, the "Job Task" appears to be part of a CalcFormula of a FlowField, which means it references a table and not a variable. The "Job Task" does not need to be declared as a variable because it is used to reference a table in a CalcFormula expression.
For "Add the property FieldClass = FlowField; for field 3": The line of code CalcFormula = sum("Job Task
"."Recognized Sales Amount" where("Job No." = field("No."))); indicates that this field is calculated from other table data, which is the definition of a FlowField. Therefore, adding the property FieldClass = FlowField; is necessary for the field to function correctly.
For "Add the property FieldClass = FlowFilter; for field 3": FlowFilters are used to filter data based on the value in a flow field. Since field 3 is using a CalcFormula to sum values, it is a FlowField and not a FlowFilter. Therefore, this statement is not correct.
For "In line 23, assign the 'User Setup' table to a field": The line TableRelation = "User Setup"; suggests that the "Project Manager" field has a relation to the "User Setup" table, which is a method of assigning a table to a field to ensure that the values in "Project Manager" correspond to values in the "User Setup" table.
Hence, this statement is true.