|
> From: Bob Cozzi
>
> D myField S 10C Inz(%UCS2('ABABRA@#$%'))
>
> I used to store all my literals as literals but now I store them using
> this method so I don't have issue when my code is run on a non-CCSID(37)
> machine.
Realize though that this is a bit of overkill for most situations. If
you're using invariant characters (basically most alphanumeric characters
except for @, #, $ and %), you don't need the double storage required for
the Unicode data.
And hopefully you have very little need for variant character literals; most
multi-national programming shops removed variant characters in the mid-90s.
This includes even things like variable names in source code; try to find a
dollar sign on a French keyboard!
There are occasions; the @ sign is certainly one of those. But since you
know ahead of time what's in your literal, it's easy to determine whether
you have a variant character. If you don't, using a good old character
value is fine and saves you half the bytes.
Joe
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