$E2A: Difference between revisions

From m204wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Automatically generated page update)
m (→‎Usage notes: add link)
Line 20: Line 20:


==Usage notes==
==Usage notes==
The inverse of <var>$E2A</var> is [[$A2E]].  
<ul>
<li>The inverse of <var>$E2A</var> is <var>[[$A2E]]</var>. </li>


$E2A uses the "standard" EBCDIC-to-ASCII translation tables provided by Sirius, and it provides no mechanism for overriding these tables.
<li><var>$E2A</var> uses the Janus "STANDARD" ASCII-to-EBCDIC translation tables, and it provides no mechanism for overriding these tables. However, as described in [[Translate tables|translation tables]], you are able to modify the STANDARD tables if necessary. </li>
</ul>


==Products authorizing {{PAGENAMEE}}==  
==Products authorizing {{PAGENAMEE}}==  

Revision as of 23:10, 11 January 2018

Translate EBCDIC to ASCII

Note: Most Sirius $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. The OO equivalent for the $E2A function is EbcdicToAscii. For a full list of string and numeric conversion functions see List of String methods and List of Float methods.

The $E2A function returns a string which is the ASCII equivalent of the (presumed) EBCDIC input string. $E2A is longString capable, that is, it can receive an input longstring and will produce an output longstring.

$E2A accepts one required argument and returns a string value.

The first argument is the string to be translated from EBCDIC to ASCII.

The returned result is a string which is the ASCII equivalent of the (presumed) EBCDIC input string.

Syntax

%ascii = $E2A(ebcdic_val)

%ascii is set to the EBCDIC-to-ASCII translation of ebcdic_val.

Usage notes

  • The inverse of $E2A is $A2E.
  • $E2A uses the Janus "STANDARD" ASCII-to-EBCDIC translation tables, and it provides no mechanism for overriding these tables. However, as described in translation tables, you are able to modify the STANDARD tables if necessary.

Products authorizing $E2A