The problems with the question!
1. You probably CAN use CPYFRMIMPF to copy something from a library,
just that no one does it. The reason it MIGHT be possible is, that
you CAN refer to a library object using path naming, as is done with
non-library objects - things off of /root. <<
Sure you can, it can even be a source file. In fact, originally, a source file was the only option
for this command.
2. No one puts PC-style files in a library object - that is not the
purpose of library objects. <<
Not True! Source files work fine for holding what would normally be text files on a PC. If your
company doesn't use the IFS, and you can't get them to open it up, the source files work well.
3. CPYFRMIMPF will do you NO good when run against an Excel file,
because those files have special structured data that the command
will not convert to a physical file. <<
And it will not work against a Word or Access file either. Because these are not CSV files. However,
if you save your Excel data as a CSV, and it really is in a format that can readily be converted to a
table (take the column headings out). CPYFRMIMPF can indeed work for you.
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