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Simon Coulter schreef:suspect and not to be trusted. I have NEVER had a problem when using
Note: I see various other comments indicating SFLNXTCHG or READC are
they worked. It took about 15 minutes to properly understand thethese keywords except when I first started and did not understand how
(probably the READC loop itself) and not the behaviour of SFLNXTCHG orrelationship and since then READC has always behaved as I expected.
The most likely cause of your problem is something in your code
bit many times by missed readc's for various reasons' but did notREADC.
Regards,
Simon Coulter.
Simon,
I see only two comments advising not to use READC. Jack said 'I have been
specify whether READC or he was to blame; Booth just said 'Get rid of alot of headaches. Forget the read'. So you're slightly exaggerating :-)
READT - read touched. Because if the user enters something but then
The problem with READC is that the name is wrong: it should have been
decides to blank the field or just rekeys the original value, the recordwill be read by READC, even if nothing actually changed. Mostly I am not
interested whether a user touched a record after I last displayed it, butwhether the contents of the record have changed since I filled it.
If I use READC, I still have to compare the actual to the original valuesand if for some reason I do not want to process the touched
records immediately, I have to mess with SFLNXTCHG to 'remember' that therecord was touched. That makes READC problematic, even it works
flawlessly as documented.list
I agree strongly with Booth; a FOR-loop is much easier to understand.
Joep Beckeringh
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