ANAPLAN MASTER ANAPLANNER VERIFIED EXAM SOLUTIONS -
COMPREHENSIVE QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS - CURRENT
VERSION (2026/2027)
1. What is the recommended maximum number of list items in Anaplan? A
list should ideally contain no more than 1 million items, though technical limits
are higher. Beyond this, performance may degrade.
2. What is the fundamental building block of an Anaplan model? The
module is the fundamental building block, consisting of dimensions (lists, time,
versions) and line items that store data.
3. What is the difference between numbered lists and regular lists?
Numbered lists automatically generate unique identifiers and are designed for
transactional data, while regular lists are manually maintained and better for
master data.
4. When should you use a subsidiary view instead of a separate module?
Use subsidiary views when you need different dimensional perspectives of the
same data without duplicating storage or calculations.
5. What is the maximum number of dimensions a module can have? A
module can have up to 12 dimensions including time, versions, and lists.
6. What is sparsity in Anaplan? Sparsity refers to modules where many cell
combinations don't contain data. Anaplan only stores cells with values, making
sparse modules efficient.
7. What is the purpose of the Summary method in list properties? Summary
methods determine how child items aggregate to parent levels (SUM, MIN,
MAX, AVG, etc.).
8. What is ragged hierarchy? A ragged hierarchy is when list items have
different numbers of levels, such as organizational structures where some
branches are deeper than others.
9. What is the difference between Formula scope and Summary scope?
Formula scope calculates at the leaf level, while Summary scope calculates at
all levels including parents.
, 10. When should you use NONE as a summary method? Use NONE when
aggregation doesn't make logical sense, such as for percentages, ratios, or text
values.
11. What is a composite hierarchy? A composite hierarchy combines multiple
separate hierarchies into a single dimensional structure, useful for alternate
rollup paths.
12. What is the recommended approach for handling many-to-many
relationships? Create a mapping module or numbered list to serve as a bridge
between the two entities.
13. What are the three types of time settings in Anaplan? Model Calendar,
which defines fiscal years, periods, and weeks for the entire model.
14. What is the purpose of the Applies To dimension? Applies To defines
which list items a line item is relevant for, reducing memory usage by only
storing needed cells.
15. What is the difference between a line item subset and a regular list? A
line item subset is a special list containing selected line items from a module,
enabling dynamic module structures.
16. What is the DISCO method? DISCO stands for Dimension, Input, System
Module, Calculation, Output - a methodology for organizing modules by
purpose.
17. What is a SYS module? SYS (System) modules contain administrative
data, settings, and mappings that support model functionality.
18. What is the purpose of creating separate input modules? Input modules
isolate user-editable data from calculations, improving governance and change
tracking.
19. What is the recommended naming convention for modules? Use prefixes
indicating purpose (INP, SYS, CALC, RPT) followed by descriptive names
using consistent capitalization.
20. What is the cell count consideration in module design? Total cells =
product of all dimension sizes. Keep below 10 billion cells per module for
optimal performance.
Formulas & Calculations (41-80)
COMPREHENSIVE QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS - CURRENT
VERSION (2026/2027)
1. What is the recommended maximum number of list items in Anaplan? A
list should ideally contain no more than 1 million items, though technical limits
are higher. Beyond this, performance may degrade.
2. What is the fundamental building block of an Anaplan model? The
module is the fundamental building block, consisting of dimensions (lists, time,
versions) and line items that store data.
3. What is the difference between numbered lists and regular lists?
Numbered lists automatically generate unique identifiers and are designed for
transactional data, while regular lists are manually maintained and better for
master data.
4. When should you use a subsidiary view instead of a separate module?
Use subsidiary views when you need different dimensional perspectives of the
same data without duplicating storage or calculations.
5. What is the maximum number of dimensions a module can have? A
module can have up to 12 dimensions including time, versions, and lists.
6. What is sparsity in Anaplan? Sparsity refers to modules where many cell
combinations don't contain data. Anaplan only stores cells with values, making
sparse modules efficient.
7. What is the purpose of the Summary method in list properties? Summary
methods determine how child items aggregate to parent levels (SUM, MIN,
MAX, AVG, etc.).
8. What is ragged hierarchy? A ragged hierarchy is when list items have
different numbers of levels, such as organizational structures where some
branches are deeper than others.
9. What is the difference between Formula scope and Summary scope?
Formula scope calculates at the leaf level, while Summary scope calculates at
all levels including parents.
, 10. When should you use NONE as a summary method? Use NONE when
aggregation doesn't make logical sense, such as for percentages, ratios, or text
values.
11. What is a composite hierarchy? A composite hierarchy combines multiple
separate hierarchies into a single dimensional structure, useful for alternate
rollup paths.
12. What is the recommended approach for handling many-to-many
relationships? Create a mapping module or numbered list to serve as a bridge
between the two entities.
13. What are the three types of time settings in Anaplan? Model Calendar,
which defines fiscal years, periods, and weeks for the entire model.
14. What is the purpose of the Applies To dimension? Applies To defines
which list items a line item is relevant for, reducing memory usage by only
storing needed cells.
15. What is the difference between a line item subset and a regular list? A
line item subset is a special list containing selected line items from a module,
enabling dynamic module structures.
16. What is the DISCO method? DISCO stands for Dimension, Input, System
Module, Calculation, Output - a methodology for organizing modules by
purpose.
17. What is a SYS module? SYS (System) modules contain administrative
data, settings, and mappings that support model functionality.
18. What is the purpose of creating separate input modules? Input modules
isolate user-editable data from calculations, improving governance and change
tracking.
19. What is the recommended naming convention for modules? Use prefixes
indicating purpose (INP, SYS, CALC, RPT) followed by descriptive names
using consistent capitalization.
20. What is the cell count consideration in module design? Total cells =
product of all dimension sizes. Keep below 10 billion cells per module for
optimal performance.
Formulas & Calculations (41-80)