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Oracle Exam 1Z0-1080-24 Topic 1 Question 1 Discussion

Actual exam question for Oracle's 1Z0-1080-24 exam
Question #: 1
Topic #: 1
[All 1Z0-1080-24 Questions]

In which two ways do parent/child relationships between approval unit hierarchy members affect the review process?

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Suggested Answer: A, D

In Oracle Planning 2024, the approval process uses an approval unit hierarchy where parent and child relationships influence the review workflow. The two ways these relationships affect the process are:

A . When the status of all children changes to one status (for example, Signed Off), the parent status changes to the same status: Correct. In a bottom-up approval process, when all child approval units reach a uniform status (e.g., Signed Off, Approved), the parent's status automatically updates to match, reflecting the completion of the children's review.

B . When you approve a parent, its children are Signed Off: Incorrect. Approving a parent does not automatically sign off its children; the workflow typically moves bottom-up, requiring children to be approved first.

C . After all children are promoted to the same owner, the parent status is changed to Signed Off: Incorrect. Promotion to an owner changes ownership, not necessarily status (e.g., Signed Off). Status changes are driven by approval actions, not just ownership.

D . After all children are promoted to the same owner, the parent is promoted to the owner: Correct. In the approval hierarchy, once all child units are promoted to a new owner (e.g., for review), the parent unit is also promoted to that owner, ensuring the hierarchy progresses together.

The Oracle documentation confirms that A (status aggregation) and D (owner promotion) are key behaviors of parent/child relationships in the approval process, making them the correct answers.


Oracle Planning 2024 Implementation Study Guide: 'Approval Unit Hierarchies' (docs.oracle.com, Published 2024-09-25).

Oracle EPM Cloud Documentation: 'Managing Approvals' (docs.oracle.com, Published 2023-12-20, updated for 2024).

Contribute your Thoughts:

Nickie
5 days ago
This question is a real head-scratcher, but I'm feeling lucky with C and D. After all, who doesn't love a good parent-child promotion party?
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Helene
6 days ago
Hmm, I'd say B and D. It makes sense that the parent's approval would cascade down to the children, and that the parent would inherit the same owner as the children. Easy peasy!
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Bev
7 days ago
That's true. It ensures consistency in the approval process.
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Argelia
8 days ago
This is a tricky one. I'm torn between A and C. But I'll go with A since it's more intuitive that the parent status changes when all the children's statuses change.
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Gail
11 days ago
I believe when you approve a parent, its children automatically get Signed Off.
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Dorothy
15 days ago
I'm going with D. Once all the children are promoted to the same owner, the parent should also be promoted to that owner. Seems logical to me.
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Glory
3 days ago
I think A makes more sense. When all children have the same status, the parent's status changes to that as well.
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Billye
4 days ago
I think A makes more sense. When all children have the same status, the parent status changes to that status.
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Izetta
24 days ago
I think B is the correct answer. When you approve a parent, its children are automatically Signed Off. Seems like the most straightforward option.
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Delila
28 days ago
Yes, that's correct. It helps streamline the review process.
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Hershel
1 months ago
I think the parent status changes when all children have the same status.
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