7 78 1 RANGECHECK Parameters

LANSA Technical

7.78.1 RANGECHECK Parameters

FIELD

IN_RANGE

MSGDTA

MSGF

MSGID

MSGTXT

OUT_RANGE

RANGE

FIELD

Specifies the name of the field which is to be checked.

RANGE

Specifies from 1 to 20 ranges of values that are to be checked against the field. Each individual range must consist of a "low" value and a "high" value. See following examples for more details.

IN_RANGE

Specifies the action to be taken if the field is found to be in one (or more) of the ranges specified in the RANGE parameter.

If *NEXT is specified the field is considered to have passed the validation check. Processing will continue with the next RDML command.

If *ERROR is specified the field is considered to have failed the validation check. Either the message text specified in MSGTXT or the message specified in MSGID and MSGF parameters will be displayed on line 22/24 of the next screen format presented to the user. In addition the field named in the FIELD parameter will be displayed in reverse image and the screen cursor will be positioned to the first field on the screen that is in error. Processing continues with the next RDML command.

If *ACCEPT is specified the field is considered to have passed the validation check AND no other validation checks will be performed against the field named in the FIELD parameter within this validation block. Processing continues with the next RDML command. However, if this is another validation check against the same field it will be effectively "disabled" and not performed.

OUT_RANGE

Specifies the action to be taken if the field is not found to be in any of the range(s) specified in the RANGE parameter.

If *NEXT is specified the field is considered to have passed the validation check. Processing will continue with the next RDML command.

If *ERROR is specified the field is considered to have failed the validation check. Either the message text specified in MSGTXT or the message specified in MSGID and MSGF parameters will be displayed on line 22/24 of the next screen format presented to the user. In addition the field named in the FIELD parameter will be displayed in reverse image and the screen cursor will be positioned to the first field on the screen that is in error. Processing continues with the next RDML command.

If *ACCEPT is specified the field is considered to have passed the validation check AND no other validation checks will be performed against the field named in the FIELD parameter within this validation block. Processing continues with the next RDML command. However, if this is another validation check against the same field it will be effectively "disabled" and not performed.

MSGTXT

Allows up to 80 characters of message text to be specified. The message text specified should be enclosed in quotes. Use either the MSGTXT parameter or the MSGID / MSGF parameters but not both.

MSGID

Allows a standard message identifier to be specified as the message that should be used. Message identifiers must be 7 characters long. Use this parameter in conjunction with the MSGF parameter.

MSGF

Specifies the message file in which the message identified in the MSGID parameter will be found. This parameter is a qualified name. The message file name must be specified. If required the library in which the message file resides can also be specified. If no library name is specified, library *LIBL is assumed.

MSGDTA

Use this parameter only in conjunction with the MSGID and MSGF parameters. It specifies from 1 to 20 values that are to be used to replace "&n" substitution variables in the message specified in the MSGID parameter.

Values in this parameter may be specified as field names, an expandable group expression, alphanumeric literals or numeric literals. They should exactly match in type, length and specification order the format of the substitution variables defined in the message.

When a field specified in this parameter has a type of signed (also called zoned) decimal, the corresponding "&n" variable in the message should have type *CHAR (character). This may cause a problem when dealing with negative values. In this case use packed decimal format instead.

When an "&n" variable in the message has type *DEC (packed decimal) the field specified in this message must be of packed decimal type.

When using alphanumeric literals in this parameter, remember that trailing blanks may be significant. For instance, if a message is defined as:

"&1 are out of stock ... reorder &2"
 

where &1 is defined as (*CHAR 10) and &2 as (*DEC 7 0), then the message will NOT be issued correctly if specified like this:

MSGDTA('BOLTS' #ORDQTY)
 

or like this:

MSGDTA('BOLTS     ' #ORDQTY)
 

To make LANSA aware of the trailing blanks, the parameter must be specified like this:

MSGDTA('''BOLTS     ''' #ORDQTY)
 

When expandable expressions are used, the expanded field list must not exceed the maximum number of substitution variables allowed in the parameter.