It depends on local custom.
If you are lucky, it is documented somewhere, and you can find the documentation (or you can find a cranky old girl who can run the system with her eyes closed, and has been doing it so long that she can't do it with her eyes open, because the screens just confuse her).
A search of this site should produce a LOT of discussion about part numbering and related issues, with no clear consensus except that everyone does it differently, and every system you might encounter has advantages and disadvantages.
Also note, it's fairly common to have part numbers and drawing numbers that bear no relation whatsoever to each other, so you might need computer help to translate from one to another. ... and there may be more than two identification numbers to correlate.
My last employer, an engine dealer who also blundered into generator rentals and some manufacturing, ran its business on a circa 1972 POS system (I mean that both ways). They used whatever part number was on the box that the parts came in, without necessarily keeping a record of who manufactured the part. Because of limited fixed field widths, part names and descriptions had to be severely abbreviated, and how and how well that was done depended on which low wage untrained clerk entered the part for the first time, or maybe for the third time, because the POS search function couldn't always find the parts that were in the system, and often could find a particular part by searching on a description, but couldn't find the same part when you queried by part number, using the same part number it had just found. That was partially rooted in a limited character set used by the ancient mainframe software that was in fact being executed on multiple levels of simulation, all hosted on modern IBM hardware running Linux or something similar.
... sorry for the rant; you hit a nerve there.
Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA