|
Scott, I love that idea! Simple and elegant. I can't tell you the number of
times I've cursed TESTN for this problem. Heck, you could make it a lot more
universal and define WORK as a 31-byte alpha, instead of 4. Another tip for
my toolbox!
Dan Bale
IT - AS/400
Handleman Company
248-362-4400 Ext. 4952
-------------------------- Original Message --------------------------
'12G' is a character representation of the number -127. When you
MOVE a negative number to a character field, it changes the value of
the "zone" portion of rightmost byte to reflect that its a negative
number. (The change will usually result in a letter from A-R or the "{"
character.)
Therefore "12G" is a valid number.
If you only want to test for valid positive numbers, do something like
this:
C MOVEL '12G' SIN 3
C MOVE *zeros WORK 4
C MOVEL SIN WORK
C TESTN WORK 81
c eval *inlr = *on
By putting that extra zero at the end, the "G" ends up in the middle
of the number, and will signal an error.
On Tue, 31 Oct 2000, Lurton Keel wrote:
> Here is a program.
> C MOVEL '12G' SIN 3
> C TESTN SIN 81
> c eval *inlr = *on
> indicator 81 is in pos 71-72.
> My problem is that in the above example, indicator 81 is on even though
> there is a "G" in the field.
> The RPG reference says.
> "Positions 71 and 72: Either the result field contains numeric characters,
> or it contains a 1-character field that consists of a letter from A to R."
> What's up
>
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