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Interesting. And yes! Weird.
I replicated your code and it's like you say.
I debugged the procedure using the "C" source code, and I could see that,
YES it changes the value of SQLSTATE to '00000' just after your first "if",
it does it using this:
memset(SQLSTATE, '0', 5);
Then it immediately also resets SQLCODE to zero.

Additionally, when you declared the SQLSTATE variable, it actually did not
set it to blanks as your default clause specified. I inspected it and it
rather initialized it with the value '00000'.

This explains the "weird" behavior.

HTH

JS


El lun, 24 feb 2025 a las 8:07, Martijn van Breden (<
m.vanbreden@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>) escribió:

Hi all

I ran into some peculiar piece of code that didn't do what I expected and
decided to run a small test.
The goal is to see if SqlState is being reset in an if-statement. My human
brain says it shouldn't be reset in the example code below

begin
declare sqlState char(5) default '';
declare myLocalVar char(1) default 'X';
select IBMREQD into myLocalVar from sysibm.sysdummy1 where 0 = 1;
if SqlState = '02000' then
if SqlState = '00000' then
call systools.lprintf ('2:' || SqlState || myLocalVar);
end if;
end if;
end;

SqlState and myLocalVar are declared
I select IBMREQD from sysdummy1 with a where condition that assures it's
not found (the value in sysdummy1 is 'Y'). My SqlState is therefore 02000,
I checked that. So, my subsequent if-statement is then true.
In my mind the inner if-statement can't be true if the outer is, so it
should never produce an entry in the joblog.

However, it does give "2:00000X" in the joblog.
I'm aware that the call to lprintf will alter the SqlState value, but I
only expect a new value for SqlState after the call.

It seems that the if statement itself modifies SqlState or am I
overlooking something? It just seems weird...


Kind regards,



Martijn van Breden

lead software architect




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