
The Item Details view provides a consolidated snapshot of a single item, including identifiers, category, on-hand level, reorder point, and related movement history for that item.
Where you find it
Open an item from Master data → Inventory → Items list, or navigate from search/scan results.
What you see on this page
Item summary card
Item image thumbnail (if provided)
SKU: the item’s unique internal identifier
Status: e.g., Out of stock (based on on-hand level)
On-hand: current quantity available, with unit (e.g., 0 box)
Reorder point: threshold that marks the item as “Low stock” when on-hand approaches or falls below it (e.g., 10 box)
Barcode: numeric barcode value
Category: assigned category name
Barcode preview: a rendered barcode for quick visual verification
Movements panel (right side)
Movements table (for this item) with columns such as:
Reference (movement document reference)
Type (Inbound/Outbound)
Partner (customer/supplier)
Date
Quantity
Actions
Export and Print actions (for the item’s movement list/report)
Filters (beneath item summary)
Search field: search reference, partner, notes, or status (based on your build)
Type filter: All / In / Out
Partner filter: All partners
Staff filter: All staff (useful for accountability and audits)
Date range: filter movements by a specific time window
Actions
Edit (bottom button): opens the item edit screen to update master data (name, identifiers, category, unit, reorder point, photo, etc.).
Typical scenarios
Scenario A — Verify an item and its identifiers
Open the item from Inventory (or scan the barcode/SKU if supported).
Confirm SKU and barcode are correct.
Check category and unit for accuracy.
Use Edit to correct any master-data fields if needed.
Scenario B — Investigate why stock is low or zero
Open Item Details.
Confirm Status (Low/Out) and On-hand quantity.
Review the Movements list filtered by Out to see recent issuing movements.
Use Date range to isolate a specific period (e.g., last 7 days).
Export or Print the movement history for audit review.
Scenario C — Reorder planning
Open Item Details.
Compare On-hand to Reorder point.
If on-hand is at/below reorder point, plan replenishment and record an inbound receiving movement when stock arrives.
Notes & best practices
Reorder point is a planning indicator, not a quantity override; it does not change stock automatically.
Movement history is the authoritative audit trail—use it for reconciliation and accountability.
Use Staff filter if you need to track who performed stock changes.