$ProcGet: Difference between revisions

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{{DISPLAYTITLE:$ProcGet}}
{{DISPLAYTITLE:$ProcGet}}
<span class="pageSubtitle"><section begin="desc" />Next line of procedure<section end="desc" /></span>
<span class="pageSubtitle">Next line of procedure</span>


<p class="warning">Most Sirius $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. There is no direct OO equivalent for the $ProcGet function, however a whole family of methods is available, based on the OO interface to stringLists.  See the [[AppendOpenProcedure (Stringlist function)]] as a starting point.</p>
<p class="warning">Most Sirius $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. There is no direct OO equivalent for the $ProcGet function, however a whole family of methods is available, based on the OO interface to stringLists.  See the [[AppendOpenProcedure (Stringlist function)]] as a starting point.</p>

Revision as of 21:21, 22 November 2011

Next line of procedure

Most Sirius $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. There is no direct OO equivalent for the $ProcGet function, however a whole family of methods is available, based on the OO interface to stringLists. See the AppendOpenProcedure (Stringlist function) as a starting point.

$ProcGet accepts no arguments and returns a string result. Each call to $ProcGet returns either the next line of the current procedure or a null string to signify the end of the current procedure.

$ProcGet accepts no arguments. If the next input line from the current procedure contains a '??', the '??' is replaced by the third argument specified on the $ProcOpn associated with the open procedure, just as if the third $ProcOpn argument had been specified after the procedure name on an 'INCLUDE' command.

Syntax

<section begin="syntax" /> %x = $ProcGet() <section end="syntax" />

Products authorizing $ProcGet