Compaq COBOL
Reference Manual
Format 1
- Executing the INSPECT statement does not initialize the value of
tally-ctr.
- If the ALL phrase is present, the value of tally-ctr is
incremented by one for each occurrence of compare-val in
src-string.
- If the LEADING phrase is present, the value of tally-ctr
is incremented by one for each contiguous occurrence of
compare-val in src-string. The leftmost occurrence of
compare-val must be at the position where comparison begins in
the first comparison cycle. Otherwise, no tallying occurs.
- If the CHARACTERS phrase is present, the value of
tally-ctr is incremented by one for each character matched in
src-string (see General Rule 6e).
Format 2
- The adjectives ALL, LEADING, and FIRST apply to succeeding BY
phrases until the next adjective appears.
- If the CHARACTERS phrase is present, each character matched in
src-string is replaced by replace-char (see General
Rule 6e).
- When ALL is present, each occurrence of compare-val in
src-string is replaced by replace-val.
- When LEADING is present, each contiguous occurrence of
compare-val in src-string is replaced by
replace-val. The leftmost occurrence of compare-val
must be at the position where comparison begins in the first comparison
cycle. Otherwise, no replacement occurs.
- When FIRST is present, the leftmost occurrence of
compare-val in src-string is replaced by
replace-val.
Format 3
- A Format 3 INSPECT statement executes as if there were two
successive INSPECT statements with the same src-string.
Execution proceeds as if:
- The first statement were a Format 1 statement with TALLYING phrases
identical to those in the Format 3 statement
- The second statement were a Format 2 statement with REPLACING
phrases identical to those in the Format 3 statement
The General Rules for Formats 1 and 2 apply to the corresponding
phrases in the Format 3 statement.
Format 4
- A Format 4 statement executes as if:
- It were a Format 2 INSPECT statement with a series of ALL phrases,
one for each character of compare-chars
- compare-val in each ALL phrase referred to a single
character of compare-chars
- replace-val in each ALL phrase referred to a single
character of replace-chars
The individual characters of compare-chars and
replace-chars correspond by ordinal position in the data items.
Additional Reference
Examples
In the following examples, the initial values of COUNT1 and COUNT2 are
zero.
- TALLYING phrase with BEFORE option:
INSPECT ITEMA TALLYING COUNT1 FOR LEADING "L" BEFORE "A",
COUNT2 FOR LEADING "A" BEFORE "L".
|
ITEMA |
COUNT1 |
COUNT2 |
LARGE
|
1
|
0
|
ANALYST
|
0
|
1
|
- TALLYING phrase and REPLACING LEADING phrase with AFTER option:
INSPECT ITEMA TALLYING COUNT1 FOR ALL "L" "R"
REPLACING LEADING "A" BY "E" AFTER INITIAL "L".
|
ITEMA |
COUNT1 |
ITEMA |
CALLAR
|
3
|
CALLAR
|
SALAMI
|
1
|
SALEMI
|
LATTER
|
2
|
LETTER
|
- REPLACING ALL phrase with BEFORE option:
INSPECT ITEMA REPLACING ALL "A" BY "G" BEFORE "X".
|
ITEMA |
ITEMA |
ARXAX
|
GRXAX
|
HANDAX
|
HGNDGX
|
HANDAA
|
HGNDGG
|
- TALLYING and REPLACING ALL phrases:
INSPECT ITEMA TALLYING COUNT1 FOR CHARACTERS AFTER "J"
REPLACING ALL "A" BY "B".
|
ITEMA |
COUNT1 |
ITEMA |
ADJECTIVE
|
6
|
BDJECTIVE
|
JACK
|
3
|
JBCK
|
JUJMAB
|
5
|
JUJMBB
|
- REPLACING ALL phrase:
INSPECT ITEMA REPLACING ALL "X" BY "Y", "B" BY "Z",
"W" BY "Q" AFTER "R".
|
ITEMA |
ITEMA |
RXXBQWY
|
RYYZQQY
|
YZACDWBR
|
YZACDWZR
|
RAWRXEB
|
RAQRYEZ
|
- REPLACING CHARACTERS phrase:
INSPECT ITEMA REPLACING CHARACTERS BY "B" BEFORE "A".
|
ITEMA |
ITEMA |
12RXZABCD
|
BBBBBABCD
|
12RXZBBCD
|
BBBBBBBBB
|
- REPLACING ALL phrase:
INSPECT ITEMA REPLACING ALL "A" BY "X" ALL "R" BY "X"
AFTER "XXL".
|
ITEMA |
ITEMA |
AALRRRA
|
XXLRRRX
|
AXXLRRR
|
XXXLXXX
|
- CONVERTING phrase:
INSPECT ITEMA CONVERTING "SIR" TO "DTA"
AFTER QUOTE BEFORE "@".
|
ITEMA |
ITEMA |
TIRMS"SRXIL@STAR
|
TIRMS"DAXTL@STAR
|
6.8.21 MERGE
Function
The MERGE statement takes two or more identically sequenced files and
combines them according to the key values you specify. During the
process, it makes records available, in merged order, to routines in
OUTPUT PROCEDURE or to an output file.
mergefile
is a file-name described in a sort-merge file description (SD) entry in
the Data Division.
mergekey
is the data-name of a data item in a record associated with
mergefile.
alpha
is an alphabet-name defined in the SPECIAL-NAMES paragraph of the
Environment Division.
infile
is the file-name of an input file. It must be described in a file
description (FD) entry in the Data Division.
first-proc
is the section-name or paragraph-name of the output procedure's first
(or only) section or paragraph.
end-proc
is the section-name or paragraph-name of the output procedure's last
section or paragraph.
outfile
is the file-name of an output file. It must be described in a file
description (FD) entry in the Data Division.
Syntax Rules
- MERGE statements can appear anywhere in the Procedure Division
except in:
- DECLARATIVES
- Sections of a SORT or MERGE statement's INPUT or OUTPUT PROCEDURE
- If mergefile contains variable length records,
infile records must not be smaller than the smallest record in
mergefile nor larger than the largest.
- If mergefile contains fixed-length records,
infile records must not be larger than the largest record
described for mergefile.
- If outfile contains variable length records,
mergefile records must not be smaller than the smallest record
in outfile nor larger than the largest.
- If outfile contains fixed-length records,
mergefile records must not be larger than the largest record
described for outfile.
- Each mergekey must be described in records associated with
mergefile.
- mergekey can be qualified.
- mergekey cannot be a group that contains variable
occurrence data items.
- The description of mergekey cannot contain an OCCURS
clause or be subordinate to one that does.
- mergefile can have more than one record description.
However, mergekey need not be described in more than one of
the record descriptions. The character positions referenced by
mergekey are used as the key for all the file's records.
- The words THRU and THROUGH are equivalent.
- If outfile is an indexed file, the first mergekey
must be in the ASCENDING phrase. It must specify the same character
positions in its record as the prime record key for outfile.
General Rules
- The MERGE statement merges all records in the infile files.
- If mergefile contains fixed-length records, any shorter
infile records are space-filled on the right after the last
character. Space-filling occurs before the infile record is
released to mergefile.
- The leftmost mergekey is the major key, and the next
mergekey is the next most significant key. The significance of
mergekey data items is not affected by how they are divided
into KEY phrases. Only left-to-right order determines significance.
- The ASCENDING phrase causes the merged sequence to be from the
lowest mergekey value to the highest.
- The DESCENDING phrase causes the merged sequence to be from the
highest mergekey value to the lowest.
- Merge sequence follows the rules for relation condition comparisons.
- When the contents of all key data items of one record equal the
contents of the corresponding key data items in another record, the
order of return from the merge:
- Follows the order of the associated input files in the MERGE
statement
- Causes all records with equal key values from one input file to be
returned before any are returned from another
- The MERGE statement determines the comparison collating sequence
for nonnumeric mergekey items when it begins execution. If
there is a COLLATING SEQUENCE phrase in the MERGE statement, MERGE uses
that sequence.
Otherwise, it uses the collating sequence that was established for the
program as a whole in the PROGRAM COLLATING SEQUENCE clause of the
OBJECT-COMPUTER paragraph. If you do not specify the collating sequence
in either the MERGE statement or the OBJECT-COMPUTER paragraph, the
program uses the NATIVE collating sequence.
- The results of the merge are undefined unless the records in the
infile files are ordered as described in the MERGE statement's
ASCENDING or DESCENDING KEY clause.
- The MERGE statement transfers all records in infile to
mergefile. When the MERGE statement executes, infile
must not be open.
- For each infile, the MERGE statement:
- Begins file processing as if the program had executed an OPEN
statement with the INPUT phrase.
- Obtains the logical records and releases them to the merge
operation. MERGE obtains each record as if the program had executed a
READ statement with the NEXT and AT END phrases.
- Terminates file processing as if the program had executed a CLOSE
statement with no optional phrases.
These implicit OPEN, READ, and CLOSE operations cause associated
USE procedures to execute if an exception condition occurs.
- OUTPUT PROCEDURE consists of one or more sections that are as
follows:
- Contiguous in the source program
- Not a part of any other procedure
- When the MERGE statement enters the OUTPUT PROCEDURE range, it is
ready to select the next record in merged order. Statements in the
OUTPUT PROCEDURE range must execute at least one RETURN statement to
make records available for processing.
- The OUTPUT PROCEDURE can consist of any procedure needed to select,
modify, or copy the next record made available by the RETURN statement
in merged order from the file referenced by mergefile.
- The range of the OUTPUT PROCEDURE additionally includes all
statements executed as a result of a CALL, EXIT, GO TO, or PERFORM
statement. The range of the OUTPUT PROCEDURE also includes all
statements in the Declaratives Section that can be executed if control
is transferred from statements in the range of the OUTPUT PROCEDURE.
- The range of the OUTPUT PROCEDURE must not contain MERGE, SORT, or
RELEASE statements.
- If the MERGE statement is in a fixed segment, the OUTPUT
PROCEDURE range must be either:
- Completely in fixed segments
- Completely contained in one independent segment
- If the MERGE statement is in an independent segment, the
OUTPUT PROCEDURE range must be either:
- Completely in fixed segments
- Completely contained in the same independent segment as the MERGE
statement itself
- If OUTPUT PROCEDURE is used, control passes to its sections during
execution of the MERGE statement. When control passes to the last
statement in the OUTPUT PROCEDURE range, the MERGE statement ends.
Control then transfers to the next executable statement after the MERGE
statement.
- During execution of statements in the OUTPUT PROCEDURE range---or
any USE AFTER EXCEPTION procedure implicitly invoked during the MERGE
statement---no statement outside the range can manipulate the files or
record areas associated with infile or outfile.
- If there is a GIVING phrase, the MERGE statement writes all merged
records to each outfile. This transfer is an implied MERGE
statement OUTPUT PROCEDURE. Therefore, when the MERGE statement
executes, outfile must not be open.
- The MERGE statement begins outfile processing as if the
program had executed an OPEN statement with the OUTPUT phrase.
- The MERGE statement gets the merged logical records and writes them
to each outfile. MERGE writes each record as if the program
had executed a WRITE statement with no optional phrases.
For
relative files, the value of the relative key data item is 1 for the
first returned record, 2 for the second, and so on. When the MERGE
statement ends, the value of the relative key data item indicates the
number of outfile records.
- The MERGE statement terminates outfile processing as if
the program had executed a CLOSE statement with no optional phrases.
- These implicit OPEN, WRITE, and CLOSE operations cause associated
USE procedures to execute if an exception condition occurs. If the
MERGE statement tries to write beyond the boundaries of
outfile, the applicable USE AFTER EXCEPTION procedure
executes. If control returns from the USE procedure, or if there is no
USE procedure, outfile processing terminates as if the program
had executed a CLOSE statement with no optional phrases.
- If outfile contains fixed-length records, any shorter
mergefile records are space-filled on the right after the last
character. Space-filling occurs before the mergefile record is
released to outfile.
Additional References
6.8.22 MOVE
Function
The MOVE statement transfers data to one or more data areas. The
editing rules control data transfer.
src-item
is an identifier that represents the sending area.
lit
is a literal that represents the sending area.
dest-item
is an identifier that represents the receiving area.
Syntax Rules
- CORR is an abbreviation for CORRESPONDING.
- In the CORRESPONDING phrase, both src-item and
dest-item must be group items, and there can be only one
dest-item.
- If any dest-item is numeric or numeric edited,
lit cannot be any of the following:
- HIGH-VALUE
- HIGH-VALUES
- LOW-VALUE
- LOW-VALUES
- SPACE
- SPACES
- QUOTE
- QUOTES
- If lit is the figurative constant ALL literal and the
usage of dest-item is COMP-1 or COMP-2, the MOVE statement
uses only one occurrence of literal.
- No operand can be an index data item.
General Rules
- In Format 2, when the CORRESPONDING phrase is present, selected
items in src-item are moved to selected items in
dest-item. The rules for the CORRESPONDING option control
these moves. The results are the same as if the MOVE statement were
replaced by separate MOVE statements for each pair of corresponding
items in src-item and dest-item.
- In Format 1, the MOVE statement moves the sending area to the
first dest-item, then to each additional dest-item,
in the same order in which they appear in the statement.
- If src-item is reference-modified, subscripted, or
indexed, or is a function-identifier, the reference modifier,
subscript, index, or function-identifier is evaluated once, immediately
before the move to the first dest-item.
- Subscript or index evaluation for a dest-item occurs
immediately before the move to that item.
- The length of src-item is evaluated once, immediately
before the move to the first dest-item.
- The length of each dest-item is evaluated immediately
before the move to that item.
- The result of the first of the following MOVE statements is
equivalent to the three that follow. The word temp represents
an intermediate result item supplied by the compiler.
MOVE ITEMA (ITEMB) TO ITEMB, ITEMC (ITEMB).
MOVE ITEMA (ITEMB) TO temp.
MOVE temp TO ITEMB.
MOVE temp TO ITEMC (ITEMB).
|
Elementary Moves
- A move is elementary when dest-item is an elementary item,
and the sending area is either an elementary data item or a literal.
- An elementary item belongs to one of these categories, depending on
its PICTURE clause:
- Numeric
- Alphabetic
- Alphanumeric
- Numeric edited
- Alphanumeric edited
- Numeric literals are numeric. Nonnumeric literals are alphanumeric.
- The figurative constant ZERO is numeric when moved to a numeric or
numeric edited item. Otherwise, it is alphanumeric.
- The figurative constant SPACE is alphabetic.
- All other figurative constants are alphanumeric.
- These rules apply to elementary moves between categories:
- The figurative constant SPACE, or an alphanumeric edited or
alphabetic data item, cannot be moved to a numeric or numeric edited
data item.
- A numeric literal, the figurative constant ZERO, or a numeric or
numeric edited data item, cannot be moved to an alphabetic data item.
- A noninteger numeric literal or data item cannot be moved to an
alphanumeric or alphanumeric edited data item.
- All other elementary moves are valid.
Editing, De-Editing, and Data Conversion During Elementary Moves
- Editing, de-editing, or other required internal data conversions
occur during elementary moves. They are controlled by the description
of dest-item.
- When dest-item is alphanumeric or alphanumeric edited,
alignment and space-filling occur according to the Standard Alignment
Rules.
If lit or src-item is signed numeric, the
operational sign is not moved. If the operational sign occupies a
separate character position:
- The sign character is not moved.
- The size of lit or src-item is considered to be
one less than its actual size (in terms of Standard Data Format
characters).
If the sending operand is numeric and contains the PICTURE symbol
(P), all digit positions specified with this symbol are considered to
have the value zero and are counted in the size of the sending operand.
- When dest-item is numeric or numeric edited, decimal point
alignment and zero-filling occur according to the Standard Alignment
Rules.
- When dest-item is a signed numeric item, the sign from
lit or src-item is placed in it. If the sending item
is unsigned, a positive sign is placed in dest-item.
- When dest-item is an unsigned numeric item, the absolute
value of lit or src-item is moved.
- When lit or src-item is alphanumeric, the move
occurs as if the sending item were described as an unsigned numeric
integer.
- When src-item is numeric edited, the compiler de-edits it
before moving it to dest-item. Src-item can be signed.
- When dest-item is alphabetic, justification and
space-filling occur according to the Standard Alignment Rules.
Nonelementary Moves
- A nonelementary move occurs as if it were an
alphanumeric-to-alphanumeric elementary move. However, there is no
internal data conversion. The move is not affected by individual
elementary or group items in either src-item or
dest-item, except as noted in the General Rules for the OCCURS
clause.
Summary
Table 6-13 summarizes the valid types of MOVE statements. References
after slash marks show the applicable General Rule. For example, moving
a numeric edited item to an alphabetic item is invalid because of
General Rule 9b.
Table 6-13 Valid MOVE Statements
|
Category of Receiving Data Item (dest-item) |
Category of Sending Data Item (lit or src-item) |
Alphabetic |
Alphanumeric Edited Alphanumeric |
Numeric Integer Numeric Noninteger Numeric Edited |
Alphabetic
|
Yes/13
|
Yes/11
|
No/9a
|
Alphanumeric
|
Yes/13
|
Yes/11
|
Yes/12
|
Alphanumeric Edited
|
Yes/13
|
Yes/11
|
No/9a
|
Numeric Integer
|
No/9b
|
Yes/11
|
Yes/12
|
Numeric Noninteger
|
No/9b
|
No/9c
|
Yes/12
|
Numeric Edited
|
No/9b
|
Yes/11
|
Yes/12
|
Additional References
Examples
The following examples show the result of executing the statement:
An s indicates a space character.
- Numeric edited receiving item:
(The PICTURE of ITEMA is
S9999V99.)
|
ITEMA Value |
ITEMB PICTURE |
ITEMB Contents |
a.
|
+0023.00
|
ZZZZ.99
|
ss23.00
|
b.
|
-0036.93
|
++++.99
|
s-36.93
|
c.
|
+1234.56
|
Z,ZZZ.99
|
1,234.56
|
d.
|
+1234.56
|
Z,ZZZ.99-
|
1,234.56s
|
e.
|
+1234.56
|
Z,ZZZ.99+
|
1,234.56+
|
f.
|
-1234.56
|
$,$$$,$$$.99DB
|
sss$1,234.56DB
|
g.
|
-1234.56
|
$,$$$.99-
|
s$234.56-
|
h.
|
+0001.25
|
$,$$$.99
|
sss$1.25
|
i.
|
-0001.25
|
$,$$$.99
|
sss$1.25
|
j.
|
+0000.00
|
$,$$9.99
|
sss$0.00
|
k.
|
+0000.00
|
$,$$$.$$
|
ssssssss
|