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Workday-Pro-Integrations Exam Question 6
Refer to the following scenario to answer the question below.
You need to configure a Core Connector: Candidate Outbound integration for your vendor. The connector requires the data initialization service (DIS).
The vendor needs a value on the output file which contains the average number of jobs a candidate applied to. This value is not delivered by Workday so you have identified that you will need to build a calculated field to generate this value.
What steps do you follow to output the calculated field?
You need to configure a Core Connector: Candidate Outbound integration for your vendor. The connector requires the data initialization service (DIS).
The vendor needs a value on the output file which contains the average number of jobs a candidate applied to. This value is not delivered by Workday so you have identified that you will need to build a calculated field to generate this value.
What steps do you follow to output the calculated field?
Correct Answer: D
The scenario involves a Core Connector: Candidate Outbound integration requiring a calculated field for the average number of jobs a candidate applied to, which isn't a delivered Workday field. The task is to output this calculated field in the integration file. Core Connectors in Workday use predefined templates but allow customization through various configuration options. Let's evaluate the steps:
Context:
Core Connector: Candidate Outbound uses the Data Initialization Service (DIS) to extract candidate data.
A calculated field must be created (e.g., averaging the "Number of Job Applications" field across a candidate's records).
This value needs to be included in the output file sent to the vendor.
Integration Field Overrides:In Core Connectors, calculated fields are typically incorporated into the output by defining integration field overrides. This feature allows you to map a calculated field to a specific field in the connector's output structure, overriding the default delivered value (or adding a new field). The calculated field is built separately (e.g., in Report Writer or Calculated Fields) and then referenced in the integration configuration.
Option Analysis:
A . Configure a custom field override service to output the calculation: Incorrect. There's no "custom field override service" in Workday Core Connectors. This might confuse with integration field overrides, but it's not a distinct service.
B . Configure integration attributes to output the calculation: Incorrect. Integration attributes define metadata or settings for the integration (e.g., file name, delivery method), not specific field mappings for output data.
C . Configure integration field attributes to output the calculation: Incorrect. "Integration field attributes" isn't a precise Workday term for this purpose; it may confuse with field-level settings, but field overrides are the correct mechanism.
D . Configure integration field overrides to output the calculation: Correct. This is the standard method in Core Connectors to include calculated fields in the output file by overriding or adding to the delivered field structure.
Implementation:
Create a calculated field (e.g., "Average Job Applications") using functions like Arithmetic Calculation to average job application counts.
In the Core Connector configuration, navigate to the Integration Field Overrides section.
Define a new field or override an existing one, mapping it to the calculated field.
Test the integration to ensure the calculated value appears in the output file.
Reference from Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide:
Core Connectors & Document Transformation: Section on "Configuring Integration Field Overrides" explains mapping calculated fields to output files.
Integration System Fundamentals: Details how Core Connectors extend delivered functionality with custom calculations.
Context:
Core Connector: Candidate Outbound uses the Data Initialization Service (DIS) to extract candidate data.
A calculated field must be created (e.g., averaging the "Number of Job Applications" field across a candidate's records).
This value needs to be included in the output file sent to the vendor.
Integration Field Overrides:In Core Connectors, calculated fields are typically incorporated into the output by defining integration field overrides. This feature allows you to map a calculated field to a specific field in the connector's output structure, overriding the default delivered value (or adding a new field). The calculated field is built separately (e.g., in Report Writer or Calculated Fields) and then referenced in the integration configuration.
Option Analysis:
A . Configure a custom field override service to output the calculation: Incorrect. There's no "custom field override service" in Workday Core Connectors. This might confuse with integration field overrides, but it's not a distinct service.
B . Configure integration attributes to output the calculation: Incorrect. Integration attributes define metadata or settings for the integration (e.g., file name, delivery method), not specific field mappings for output data.
C . Configure integration field attributes to output the calculation: Incorrect. "Integration field attributes" isn't a precise Workday term for this purpose; it may confuse with field-level settings, but field overrides are the correct mechanism.
D . Configure integration field overrides to output the calculation: Correct. This is the standard method in Core Connectors to include calculated fields in the output file by overriding or adding to the delivered field structure.
Implementation:
Create a calculated field (e.g., "Average Job Applications") using functions like Arithmetic Calculation to average job application counts.
In the Core Connector configuration, navigate to the Integration Field Overrides section.
Define a new field or override an existing one, mapping it to the calculated field.
Test the integration to ensure the calculated value appears in the output file.
Reference from Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide:
Core Connectors & Document Transformation: Section on "Configuring Integration Field Overrides" explains mapping calculated fields to output files.
Integration System Fundamentals: Details how Core Connectors extend delivered functionality with custom calculations.
Workday-Pro-Integrations Exam Question 7
What is the workflow to upload an XSLT file for a brand new Document Transformation system?
Correct Answer: B
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 Reference:
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.
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 Reference:
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.
Workday-Pro-Integrations Exam Question 8
Which three features must all XSLT files contain to be considered valid?
Correct Answer: B
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.
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.
Workday-Pro-Integrations Exam Question 9
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?
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?
Correct Answer: B
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.
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.
Workday-Pro-Integrations Exam Question 10
Refer to the following XML data source to answer the question below.

You need the integration file to format the ps:Position_ID field to 10 characters, truncate the value if it exceeds, and align everything to the left.
How will you start your template match on ps:Position to use Document Transformation (DT) to do the transformation using XTT?

You need the integration file to format the ps:Position_ID field to 10 characters, truncate the value if it exceeds, and align everything to the left.
How will you start your template match on ps:Position to use Document Transformation (DT) to do the transformation using XTT?
Correct Answer: A
In Workday integrations, Document Transformation (DT) using XSLT with Workday Transformation Toolkit (XTT) attributes is used to transform XML data, such as the output from a Core Connector or EIB, into a specific format for third-party systems. In this scenario, you need to transform the ps:Position_ID field within the ps:Position element to a fixed length of 10 characters, truncate the value if it exceeds 10 characters, and align the output to the left. The template must match the ps:Position element and apply these formatting rules using XTT attributes.
Here's why option A is correct:
Template Matching: The <xsl:template match="ps:Position"> correctly targets the ps:Position element in the XML, as shown in the provided snippet, ensuring the transformation applies to the appropriate node.
XTT Attributes:
xtt:fixedLength="10" specifies that the Pos_ID field should be formatted to a fixed length of 10 characters. If the ps:Position_ID value exceeds 10 characters, it will be truncated (by default, XTT truncates without raising an error unless explicitly configured otherwise), meeting the requirement to truncate if the value exceeds.
xtt:align="left" ensures that the output is left-aligned within the 10-character field, aligning with the requirement to align everything to the left.
XPath Selection: The <xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/> correctly extracts the ps:Position_ID value (e.g., "P-00030") from the ps:Position_Data child element, as shown in the XML structure.
Output Structure: The <Position><Pos_ID>...</Pos_ID></Position> structure ensures the transformed data is wrapped in meaningful tags for the target system, maintaining consistency with Workday integration practices.
Why not the other options?
B .
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template xtt:align="left" match="ps:Position">
<Position>
<Pos_ID xtt:fixedLength="10">
<xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/>
</Pos_ID>
</Position>
</xsl:template>
This applies xtt:align="left" to the xsl:template element instead of the Pos_ID element. XTT attributes like fixedLength and align must be applied directly to the element being formatted (Pos_ID), not the template itself, making this incorrect.
C .
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="ps:Position">
<Position xtt:fixedLength="10">
<Pos_ID xtt:align="left">
<xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/>
</Pos_ID>
</Position>
</xsl:template>
This applies xtt:fixedLength="10" to the Position element and xtt:align="left" to Pos_ID. However, XTT attributes like fixedLength and align should be applied to the specific field being formatted (Pos_ID), not the parent element (Position). This misplacement makes it incorrect.
D .
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template xtt:fixedLength="10" match="ps:Position">
<Position>
<Pos_ID xtt:align="left">
<xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/>
</Pos_ID>
</Position>
</xsl:template>
This applies xtt:fixedLength="10" to the xsl:template element and xtt:align="left" to Pos_ID. Similar to option B, XTT attributes must be applied to the specific element (Pos_ID) being formatted, not the template itself, making this incorrect.
To implement this in XSLT for a Workday integration:
Use the template from option A to match ps:Position, apply xtt:fixedLength="10" and xtt:align="left" to the Pos_ID element, and extract the ps:Position_ID value using the correct XPath. This ensures the ps:Position_ID (e.g., "P-00030") is formatted to 10 characters, truncated if necessary, and left-aligned, meeting the integration file requirements.
:
Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide: Section on "Document Transformation (DT) and XTT" - Details the use of XTT attributes like fixedLength and align for formatting data in XSLT transformations, including truncation behavior.
Workday Core Connector and EIB Guide: Chapter on "XML Transformations" - Explains how to use XSLT templates with XTT attributes to transform position data, including fixed-length formatting and alignment.
Workday Integration System Fundamentals: Section on "XTT in Integrations" - Covers the application of XTT attributes to specific fields in XML for integration outputs, ensuring compliance with formatting requirements like length and alignment.
Here's why option A is correct:
Template Matching: The <xsl:template match="ps:Position"> correctly targets the ps:Position element in the XML, as shown in the provided snippet, ensuring the transformation applies to the appropriate node.
XTT Attributes:
xtt:fixedLength="10" specifies that the Pos_ID field should be formatted to a fixed length of 10 characters. If the ps:Position_ID value exceeds 10 characters, it will be truncated (by default, XTT truncates without raising an error unless explicitly configured otherwise), meeting the requirement to truncate if the value exceeds.
xtt:align="left" ensures that the output is left-aligned within the 10-character field, aligning with the requirement to align everything to the left.
XPath Selection: The <xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/> correctly extracts the ps:Position_ID value (e.g., "P-00030") from the ps:Position_Data child element, as shown in the XML structure.
Output Structure: The <Position><Pos_ID>...</Pos_ID></Position> structure ensures the transformed data is wrapped in meaningful tags for the target system, maintaining consistency with Workday integration practices.
Why not the other options?
B .
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template xtt:align="left" match="ps:Position">
<Position>
<Pos_ID xtt:fixedLength="10">
<xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/>
</Pos_ID>
</Position>
</xsl:template>
This applies xtt:align="left" to the xsl:template element instead of the Pos_ID element. XTT attributes like fixedLength and align must be applied directly to the element being formatted (Pos_ID), not the template itself, making this incorrect.
C .
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template match="ps:Position">
<Position xtt:fixedLength="10">
<Pos_ID xtt:align="left">
<xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/>
</Pos_ID>
</Position>
</xsl:template>
This applies xtt:fixedLength="10" to the Position element and xtt:align="left" to Pos_ID. However, XTT attributes like fixedLength and align should be applied to the specific field being formatted (Pos_ID), not the parent element (Position). This misplacement makes it incorrect.
D .
xml
WrapCopy
<xsl:template xtt:fixedLength="10" match="ps:Position">
<Position>
<Pos_ID xtt:align="left">
<xsl:value-of select="ps:Position_Data/ps:Position_ID"/>
</Pos_ID>
</Position>
</xsl:template>
This applies xtt:fixedLength="10" to the xsl:template element and xtt:align="left" to Pos_ID. Similar to option B, XTT attributes must be applied to the specific element (Pos_ID) being formatted, not the template itself, making this incorrect.
To implement this in XSLT for a Workday integration:
Use the template from option A to match ps:Position, apply xtt:fixedLength="10" and xtt:align="left" to the Pos_ID element, and extract the ps:Position_ID value using the correct XPath. This ensures the ps:Position_ID (e.g., "P-00030") is formatted to 10 characters, truncated if necessary, and left-aligned, meeting the integration file requirements.
:
Workday Pro Integrations Study Guide: Section on "Document Transformation (DT) and XTT" - Details the use of XTT attributes like fixedLength and align for formatting data in XSLT transformations, including truncation behavior.
Workday Core Connector and EIB Guide: Chapter on "XML Transformations" - Explains how to use XSLT templates with XTT attributes to transform position data, including fixed-length formatting and alignment.
Workday Integration System Fundamentals: Section on "XTT in Integrations" - Covers the application of XTT attributes to specific fields in XML for integration outputs, ensuring compliance with formatting requirements like length and alignment.
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