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Don, Mark, Bruce.

Thanks for the input.
I was performing a %lookup on the array, extending out to the number of
elements I allocated.
I've changed it so I perform the %lookup if I've loaded anything into
the array and I only look out so far as what I've loaded as opposed to
what was allocated.

So not only do I not need the FOR loop (save processing time), I also
tighten my %lookup (save processing time).

Thanks,

Kurt Anderson
Application Developer
Highsmith Inc

-----Original Message-----
From: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of mlazarus@xxxxxxxx
Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2005 9:23 AM
To: rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: dynamic array initialization

Kurt,

 Why do you need to initialize the array at all?  Just keep track of the
elements you have loaded and don't access any elemets you have not
loaded.

 -mark

Original Message:
-----------------
From: Kurt Anderson kjanderson@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Date: Thu, 26 May 2005 08:52:14 -0500
To: rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: RPG400-L Digest, Vol 4, Issue 576


Bruce,

I don't want to do that because that will clear the entire array while
the %realloc will increase the dimension of the array while keeping data
that has already been loaded into the array.

Let's say the array has a max of 10 elements.  
But I want 11.  
So I issue the %realloc to increase the array by another 10 so the max
is 20 (I could increase it by 1, but I'd rather allocate a block of
elements at a time rather than reallocate every time I need the array to
grow).  I'd like to initialize the new block but retain the data that
was already loaded.

Kurt Anderson
Application Developer
Highsmith Inc

-----Original Message-----
From: rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:rpg400-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Bruce Guetzkow
Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2005 8:40 AM
To: rpg400-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: RPG400-L Digest, Vol 4, Issue 576

Kurt:

<snip>
Is there any way I can automate the initialization through a keyword
instead of using the FOR loop in the subroutine below?
</snip>

I haven't done this with a dynamic array, but can't you just do the
following after the allocation?
C                   Clear                   ItmAry

This would eliminate the FOR-loop processing at least.  I would think
that initializing the array (with or without the FOR-loop) is your best
bet.

--Bruce Guetzkow

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