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An easy way to search for the hex character would be to copy and paste
it into the Ctrl-F search of WDSC.


Chris Hiebert
Winco Foods, LLC
Applications Development

-----Original Message-----
From: wdsci-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:wdsci-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Vern Hamberg
Sent: Monday, September 13, 2010 10:19 AM
To: Rational Developer for IBM i / Websphere Development Studio Client
forSystem i & iSeries
Subject: Re: [WDSCI-L] RPG virus?!

OK - I was thinking of using the iSeries Search off the menu bar - not

sure what to enter in Ctrl-F - there is help text for all that, it's
worth pressing F1 when in the search box. You can be a pioneer and THE
expert on searching for hex values!!

Vern

On 9/13/2010 9:29 AM, David FOXWELL wrote:
-----Message d'origine-----
[mailto:wdsci-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] De la part de Vern Hamberg

Use x'32' to find hex value 32. Same way you specify any hex
value on a command line or when setting a value of a variable.

BTW, your example of 83 is a displayable character and
wouldn't show up as a strange character! :-)
Vern, I did 'query hex' and got 'hex 82' at the bottom left of the
screen. If I do ctrl-f with x'82' if finds nothing. If I do set hex 83 I
still see the same little square shape, but SEU shows the desired
result. V6.1 maybe?

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