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Why would a data structure not be used on a procedure call? If a procedure
does one thing and one thing only why would you have variables that don't do
anything?

Also wouldn't using Static increasing your static storage requirement slow
down the program? The more static, the more it has to manage.

Why would a procedure have large data structures?

Couldn't you just base the data structure on a pointer and allocate storage
to it when you need it rather than chewing up a bunch of static storage?

Just curious.

On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 10:32 AM, Rory Hewitt <roryhewitt@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

As has been pointed out in the past, fields and DS's in the D-specs are
automatically initialized, *unless* you specify the STATIC keyword (only
valid for procedure variables). Therefore, from a performance standpoint, I
tend to declare very large DS's etc. as STATIC and then explicitly
initialize them immediately prior to their use. That way, if the DS isn't
actually used every time the procedure is called, it won't be needlessly
initialized.

On Tue, Oct 20, 2009 at 8:20 AM, Alan Campin <alan0307d@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

You have to be careful with Reset if you are writing modern ILE RPG.
(Local
variables, subprocedures, etc) unless you don't care about static
storage.

I had a program that was using a bunch of static storage but I had
nothing
declared in static. I talked to IBM and it turns out all the values for
the
Reset are stored in static storage even though the reset is to a variable
in
local storage. Why I have no idea.

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