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Hello Richard, You wrote: >The first time I tried to used the PARM type of variable, I forgot that >the Operand List needed to define the p o i n t e r s to my variables >defined in the program, and not the variables themselves! The error >message I got was different from yours though; as one would expect (not >the same mistake exactly)... Actually, an Operand List doesn't have to contain pointers to variables. It can quite happily contain the variables themselves -- essentially passing by value rather than by reference. However, because the general convention is to pass by reference it is usual to use pointers to pass the address of the variable. A few internal IBM programs accept parameters by value and I've had to build Operand Lists which directly contain variables in order to invoke them. Regards, Simon Coulter. -------------------------------------------------------------------- FlyByNight Software AS/400 Technical Specialists http://www.flybynight.com.au/ Phone: +61 3 9419 0175 Mobile: +61 0411 091 400 /"\ Fax: +61 3 9419 0175 mailto: shc@flybynight.com.au \ / X ASCII Ribbon campaign against HTML E-Mail / \ --------------------------------------------------------------------
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