Field value pairs (File architecture): Difference between revisions

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==Overview==
==Overview==
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The basic unit of storage inside a Model 204 record is the field value pair (or, more literally, "field name = value pair," specifying the field's name and value). A record or a [[Field group design (File management)|field group]] contains a series of field groups and field value pairs.</p>
The basic unit of storage inside a Model 204 [[Record (File architecture)|record]] is the field value pair (or, more literally, "field name = value pair," specifying the field's name and value). A record or a [[Field group design (File management)|field group]] contains a series of field groups and field value pairs.</p>


A record can contain multiple field value pairs for fields with the [[Field design (File management)#OCCURS_attribute|OCCURS attribute]].
A record can contain multiple field value pairs for fields with the [[Field design (File management)#OCCURS_attribute|OCCURS attribute]].

Revision as of 18:42, 4 February 2014

Overview

The basic unit of storage inside a Model 204 record is the field value pair (or, more literally, "field name = value pair," specifying the field's name and value). A record or a field group contains a series of field groups and field value pairs.

A record can contain multiple field value pairs for fields with the OCCURS attribute.

A record or a field group can contain non-OCCURS field value pairs, whose physical structure is described below, for each storage data type.

STRING fields

The field value pair for STRING fields contains three parts:

  • The field code from Table A: 3 bytes for FILEORG X'100' files, or 2 bytes for all others.
  • The length of the value for this pair (0 to 255): 1 byte.
  • The value: variable length, 0-255 bytes.

For example, a NAME field containing 'SMITH' occupies 8 or 9 bytes (depending on the FILEORG value), while a NAME of 'FRANKENSTEIN' occupies 15 or 16 bytes.

BINARY or CODED fields

The storage of BINARY and CODED fields depends on whether the file has the Optimized Field Extraction (FILEORG X'80') bit set.

Note: FILEORG X'100' files automatically also turn on x'80'.

For files that are not Optimized Field Extraction files (X'80), the field value pair contains two parts:

  • The field code from Table A: 2 bytes.
  • The value: always held as 4 bytes.

For Optimized Field Extraction files, the field value pair contains three parts:

  • The field code from Table A: 3 bytes for FILEORG X'100' files, or 2 bytes for all others.
  • The length of the value for this pair (1 to 4): 1 byte.
  • The value: variable length, 1-4 bytes.

By storing a length with all field occurrences, data in records can be read much faster. The possible trade-off on performance versus space is discussed in X'80' - Optimized Field Extraction files.

FLOAT fields

The storage of FLOAT fields depends on whether the file has the Optimized Field Extraction (FILEORG x'80') bit set.

Note: FILEORG X'100' files automatically also turn on x'80'.

For files that are not Optimized Field Extraction files, the field value pair contains two parts:

  • The field code from Table A: 2 bytes.
  • The value: always held as 4, 8, or 16 bytes, depending on the LENGTH attribute.

For Optimized Field Extraction files, the field value pair contains three parts:

  • The field code from Table A: 3 bytes for FILEORG X'100' files, or 2 bytes for all others.
  • The length of the value for this pair (1 to 4): 1 byte.
  • The value: always held as 4, 8, or 16 bytes, depending on the LENGTH attribute.

By storing a length with all field occurrences, data in records can be read much faster. The possible trade-off on performance versus space is discussed in X'80' - Optimized Field Extraction files.