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Yes, that's correct. They are used to S/36 type entry (i.e. not keying the decimal point). We're trying to transition them to 2010 but it's a slow process (think, baby steps).




<rob@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message news:mailman.38542.1279032948.2580.midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Let me see if I get this right.
Let's pretend you have a 15,5 field. And if the user keys in
1234567
Then what the number really becomes is 12.34567
And if the user keys in
123.4567
Then, by golly, that is the number.
Is this what you are saying?

Rob Berendt
--
Group Dekko Services, LLC
Dept 01.073
Dock 108
6928N 400E
Kendallville, IN 46755
http://www.dekko.com





From: "Timothy Adair" <tadair@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: 07/13/2010 10:44 AM
Subject: Re: Was a decimal point keyed?
Sent by: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx



The simple formula test (if %int(field) = field;) works great to determine

if they keyed in an explicit decimal point, UNLESS they key in a decimal
with all trailing zeroes. IOW, if the number they keyed is an integer, we

assume they did not key a decimal point.

If they key an integer with a decimal point, then the "test" returns True,

even though they did actually key an explicit decimal point.

Sorry, I should probably give a little more info.

I'm currently converting a large quantity of old RPG II programs to
free-format RPG IV, and the users want to be able to enter numeric fields,

with or without keying in a decimal point. So I have to allow them to
enter
data either way, and determine which way they keyed it in, and display it
with the decimal point.





"Vern Hamberg" <vhamberg@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:mailman.38512.1279026764.2580.midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Tim

Just curious - what does it matter if they type 15.0000? That is
effectively an integer with far too many extra keystroke, that's all in
one way of looking at it!!

In other words, what does this accomplish?

Vern


On 7/12/2010 1:22 PM, Timothy Adair wrote:
Is there a simple way to determine if a decimal point was explicitly
keyed
in a numeric field? I've tried about every trick (and combination of
tricks) that I can think of.

I can do it programmatically by defining the screen field as alpha and
a
second field as numeric but this gets a bit ugly, and could involve
dozens
of fields in hundreds of programs.

The basic test of ---

if %int(field) = field;

--- works fine unless the user keys in a value like 15.0000.


Any ideas?

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