|
I have to ask - maybe it already was - the OP is in a COBOL shop, I
believe - I'm wondering about why this isn't just being done in
COBOL (or RPG for others of us). Dancing around CL for file IO is so
much harder than just using a language made for it.
On another tack - as a general rule, I found it can be problematic to
go directly to these system tables, whether in CL like this or in an
HLL. I don't remember if format level checks are done in CL - but one
of these files changed at v7.1, and a program compiled over it at an
earlier release will blow up.
It seems safer to go with embedded SQL. Doing something like RUNSQL
in CL and then jumping through hoops - more work than we like to do,
normally. Of course, Bruce V. has utilities to help with this.
Anyhow, just a fair warning out of my own experience, as well as a
general question.
On 6/2/2012 5:37 PM, CRPence wrote:
Although there was no followup to better describe the actual
scenario, I will offer the following scenario as an example of
something like what I alluded to in the quoted message:
The desired effect is to retrieve the rows with the following key
values [shown delimited by quotation marks] from the System
Database Cross Reference file QADBXREF, using the Access Path
defined by the Logical File QADBXFIL on the two fields (DBXFIL,
DBXLIB) which are each 10-byte character:
"QCLSRC QGPL "
"QCLSRC PLIB07 "
"QCLSRC C1 "
dclf mydbxfil /* like QADBXFIL; min.: omit unsupported flds */
opnqryf qadbxfil *inp opnid(xfil) format(mydbxfil)
qryslt(' dbxfil *eq "QCLSRC"
*and dbxlib *eq %values("QGPL" "PLIB07" "C1")
')
ovrdbf mydbxfil qadbxfil share(*yes) ovrscope(*calllvl)
loop:
rcvf opnid(*none)
monmsg cpf0864 exec(do)
...
enddo
...
goto loop
...
clof xfil
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