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<SNIP> The best piece of advice, however: Don't turn back. Once you start using it, force yourself to always use it. It's too easy to say "I have to get this done YESTERDAY, so I'll do it in RPG III and move to RPG IV next time!" and that really hurts your progress... Do everything in RPG IV, and don't turn back. In less than a year, you'll wonder how you ever survived with RPG III... <SNIP> I had to look at an RPGIII program the other day and it looked real alien to me at this point. Amazing how much easier it is to code using RPGIV as opposed to RPGIII. Now if I could just make that giant leap to /FREE hehe. I would if I had time to learn it lol. Ron Power Programmer Information Services City Of St. John's, NL P.O. Box 908 St. John's, NL A1C 5M2 Tel: 709-576-8132 Email: rpower@xxxxxxxxxx Website: http://www.stjohns.ca/ ___________________________________________________________________________ Success is going from failure to failure without a loss of enthusiasm. - Sir Winston Churchill Scott Klement <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx 07/15/2004 01:45 PM Please respond to RPG programming on the AS400 / iSeries <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> To RPG programming on the AS400 / iSeries <rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx> cc Subject Re: Moving to RPGIV The book "RPG IV Jump Start" by Bryan Meyers is designed to quickly get you going on RPG IV from RPG III. I used this book to help my people make the jump back in 1996 (Though, that was the first edition, and the following link is for the fourth edition) http://www.iseriesnetwork.com/store/books/Uniquebook2.cfm?NextBook=195 Back when I made the jump, there wasn't that much that was different between RPG III and RPG IV. There were D-specs, the columns were a little different, you could use longer variable names, but that was about it. That's not true anymore! Like others have suggested, I recommend taking it one step at a time. Try converting your programs with CVTRPGSRC. That'll give you V3R1-level RPG IV code that's compatible. Once you've gotten accustomed to that, then start using EVAL and the other extended factor 2 operations (IF, WHEN, DOW, DOU, etc) instead of the old fashioned factor1/factor2/result doohickeys. Once you're comfortable with that, learn prototypes & subprocedures. Then free-form... one step at a time... The best piece of advice, however: Don't turn back. Once you start using it, force yourself to always use it. It's too easy to say "I have to get this done YESTERDAY, so I'll do it in RPG III and move to RPG IV next time!" and that really hurts your progress... Do everything in RPG IV, and don't turn back. In less than a year, you'll wonder how you ever survived with RPG III... --- Scott Klement http://www.scottklement.com On Thu, 15 Jul 2004, Pete Helgren wrote: > OK, OK, Uncle!!!! > > I have to start moving to RPG IV from my "comfortable" RPG III. I already > do quite a bit of work in Java and have done stuff in C++ so, how hard can > this be, right? What I'd like to is find out how best to make the jump in > the quickest, most painless way. Most of the programming examples posted > are in RPG IV so I REALLY need to move. > > I am not a "classically trained" programmer, so an approach or reference > that is short on theory and long on practical examples is what I am after. > If you had to choose one, and at most, two resources, which would you > choose? > > Thanks. Looking forward to RPG IV ! > > Pete Helgren > Value Added Software,Inc. > 801.581.1154 x202 > > > -- This is the RPG programming on the AS400 / iSeries (RPG400-L) mailing list To post a message email: RPG400-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/rpg400-l or email: RPG400-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/rpg400-l. This OutBound email has been scanned for Viruses
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