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you could do a setll on the file and check for %error. ----- Original Message ----- From: James H H <mailto:jamesl@xxxxxxxxxxx> Lampert To: Midrange Systems Technical <mailto:midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Discussion Sent: Thursday, March 09, 2006 8:37 PM Subject: Results and questions, Re: Something lighter than a databasefile . . . Well, our experiment with replacing the temporary file with a combination of a *USRIDX and a *DTAQ didn't pan out. In a real-world test, it was either not much better, or even slightly worse. One thing, though (and this is starting to look like time to transfer the thread to the RPG list): We did determine that writing a duplicate key to a file (and allowing it to fail) was a real killer on speed. Is there a "cheap" way to check for a duplicate key without writing, and that works when you're trying to read the file sequentially even as you're adding to it? I vaguely remember something about the relative costs of different record-level/native database operations. I don't remember whether it was on this list, or the RPG list, or in a magazine, or a Redbook, or elsewhere, but I do remember something about examples that did exactly the same thing in different ways, and ran at dramatically different speeds.
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