New Year Sale 2026! Hurry Up, Grab the Special Discount - Save 25% - Ends In 00:00:00 Coupon code: SAVE25
Welcome to Pass4Success

- Free Preparation Discussions

IFPUG I40-420 Exam - Topic 2 Question 41 Discussion

Actual exam question for IFPUG's I40-420 exam
Question #: 41
Topic #: 2
[All I40-420 Questions]

The Job Management application includes the following:

Three files of business data: Employee, Job, and Invoice

Job Rates file contains data that is stored in order to process the business rules against the business data.

The Payment Type file is identified by the developer In response to the technical requirements of the users.

Which of these files are candidates for counting as logical files (ILF or EIF)?

Show Suggested Answer Hide Answer
Suggested Answer: B

Contribute your Thoughts:

0/2000 characters
Kimberely
4 months ago
None? Really? That seems off...
upvoted 0 times
...
Kimbery
4 months ago
I'm leaning towards B, but not sure if Job Rates counts.
upvoted 0 times
...
Kizzy
5 months ago
Wait, what about Job Rates? Seems important too!
upvoted 0 times
...
Carla
5 months ago
I agree with C, those are the core files for the app.
upvoted 0 times
...
Carmelina
5 months ago
Definitely think it's C - Employee, Job, and Invoice are the main ones.
upvoted 0 times
...
Jennie
5 months ago
I’m confused about the distinction between ILFs and EIFs here. I thought Job Rates might be an ILF since it’s used for processing, but I’m not confident.
upvoted 0 times
...
Sarina
5 months ago
I practiced a similar question where we had to identify logical files, and I think it was clear that only the main business entities count as ILFs. So, I would lean towards option C.
upvoted 0 times
...
Evan
5 months ago
I remember that ILFs are internal logical files, and they usually include data that the application manages directly. So, I think Employee, Job, and Invoice are definitely ILFs.
upvoted 0 times
...
Nikita
5 months ago
I'm not entirely sure about Job Rates and Payment Type. I feel like they might be external files since they don't seem to be directly managed by the application.
upvoted 0 times
...
Herman
5 months ago
This looks like a tricky Cisco AnyConnect configuration question. I'll need to carefully read through the details and think through the steps required.
upvoted 0 times
...
Nancey
5 months ago
Okay, I think I understand the goal now. Let me double-check the solution and see if it meets the requirement to flag all cases for review.
upvoted 0 times
...
Stephen
5 months ago
Alright, let's see. Shared Key authentication, preferred SSID on the clients, and disabling SSID broadcast with MAC filtering. Yep, that should do the trick and meet the security policy. Time to put pen to paper!
upvoted 0 times
...

Save Cancel