Thursday December 3, 2009
dL4 for Windows Runtime 9.2 Release
All Rights Reserved. Copyright (c) 1997 - 2009 by:
Dynamic Concepts, Inc. Aliso Viejo, CA 92656 USA
Email address: techsupport@dynamic.com
Information: www.dynamic.com
Downloads: ftp.dynamic.com
Pre-installation instructions
=============================
o WARNING: This release will NOT run with existing SSNs that use a
license number that begins with "FE". These obsolete SSNs include
almost all SSNs created before December 2001. Please contact the
Dynamic Concepts Sales department for information on replacing SSNs
that use "FE" license numbers. Please read the following Passport
section for additional licensing information.
o This release requires the use of Passport for Windows 2.2 or later.
The new version of Passport for Windows requires the presence of an
ethernet interface or a Dynamic Concepts hardware Passport device.
Windows 95 users must use a hardware Passport or upgrade to a later
version of Windows. SSNs for Passport 2.1.3 or later are machine
specific and must not be installed on more than one system. Unlike
previous versions of dL4 for Windows, the number of simultaneous dL4
sessions will be restricted to the licensed number of users plus three
phantom ports or extra window sessions.
o This release requires an SSN authorized for release 9 of dL4. In order
to use the MySQL drivers, the SSN must be authorized for the MySQL option.
Please contact the Dynamic Concepts Sales department for information on
obtaining required SSNs.
o To use the Oracle SQL driver, the Oracle runtime libraries from Oracle
must be installed. The libraries are NOT needed to use scope or run
if the Oracle SQL driver is not used. These libraries can be found in
Oracle "Instant Client" package for Windows that can be downloaded from
oracle.com. The libraries must be placed in the dL4 installation directory
(usually "\Program Files\dL4") or the full path of the Oracle library
directory must be added to the PATH environment variable.
o Problem reports should be emailed to techsupport@dynamic.com. All problem
reports should contain a description of the problem, the operating
system name/revision, and, if at all possible, a reproducible sequence
Installation instructions
=========================
To install dL4 for Windows, perform the following steps:
1. If the dl4login network login service is installed, then, before
updating dL4, all users must log off and the dl4login service must be
stopped. The command "net stop dl4login" can be used at a command
prompt to stop the dl4login service.
2. Remove any previous dL4 for Windows release.
3. Run the dL4 installation program 1B_dl4_9.2.exe and follow the
displayed instructions. Press "Yes" when the program asks if
Passport should be installed.
4. If you haven't registered your license and SSN using the
Passport ssnmaint utility, run ssnmaint. dL4 cannot be
used until Passport is installed and your license
registered.
5. If you intend to use loadsave.exe, add the installation
directory to your PATH variable.
6. If data files will be accessed over a network, run checksys.exe
from the installation directory to detect out-of-date or
misconfigured operating system modules. The checksys utility
should be run on each Windows client system and each Windows
file server in the network. See the "Networking" section below
for details.
Acknowledgements
==========================
This software is linked with the OpenSSL library. The OpenSSL license
file and copyright notice is included in the file credits.txt.
File list
=========
readme.txt This file
license.txt Runtime license terms and conditions
credits.txt OpenSSL license and copyright information
checksys.exe Utility to detect operating system configuration
problems
codebase.dll Runtime library
dcictree.dll Runtime library
dl4basic.dll Runtime library
dl4chwin.dll Runtime library
dl4fldrv.dll Runtime library
dl4login.exe Network utility to provide telnet-like remote access to
a Windows server.
dl4pipe.exe Internal utility used by the pipe driver
dl4rt.dll Runtime library
dl4servr.exe Network service utility to run a dL4 program whenever a
TCP connection is made to a specific IP address and
port number (for Windows NT, 2000, 2003, 2008, XP or Vista)
dl4sockt.dll Runtime library
dl4stdrv.dll Runtime library
instlogn.bat Batch script to install the dl4login remote access service.
loadsave.exe dL4 compile-and-save console program
msvcrt.dll Runtime library
msvcrt40.dll Runtime library
ntwdblib.dll Runtime library
pfilter.exe Printer character translation filter
runc.exe Special version of BASIC interpreter for CGI programs
and piped I/O
runw.exe BASIC interpreter
scopec.exe Special version of dL4 IRIS-style command interpreter
for CGI programs and piped I/O
scopew.exe dL4 IRIS-style command interpreter
testlock.exe Record lock testing utility
stubwa10.dll Runtime library
dfltlp.bat Printer script for default Windows printer
selectlp.bat Printer script for user selected Windows printer
printer\ Directory of printer scripts
term\ Directory of terminal definition files for use with
scopec.exe and runc.exe
tools\ Various utilities
Highlights of This Release
==========================
o Global variables which can be passed to any program or to SPAWNed
programs.
o Conversion of IMS style structure variable definitions and references
to dL4 format.
o An option to call a global error handling subprogram whenever an
error occurs.
o New intrinsic CALLs for increased IMS BASIC compatibility.
o Improved support for IMS style date/time values in the Full-ISAM
Bridge driver.
o Configuration changes including font size can be applied to the current
session.
o Logical display attributes such as underline ('BU'/'EU') and reverse video
('BR'/'ER') can be configured to display with any combination of display
attributes or colors.
o The number of indexes that can be simultaneously opened (ISAMFILES) is
now dynamically increased as necessary.
New in This Release
=================================================================
Dec 3, 2009 (Release 9.2)
o The email driver now generates content id values for all attached files
so that HTML email can display inline images. An email application can
obtain the content id string for an attachment by using a GET statement
such as:
Get #C,-1799,N;CID$
where channel 'C' is open to the email driver, 'N' is the attachment
number, and 'CID$' is a string variable that receives the content id
value. Content id values can be up to 45 characters in length.
Attachment numbers normally begin with zero for the first attachment,
but applications can explicitly specify the attachment number in the
item number of the ADD statement that inserted the attachment (the
record number must be -1). Duplicate attachment numbers must not be
used and will produce inconsistent results.
Example:
Dim Opts$[100],Cid$[45]
Opts$ = "(From=someone,Content=html,AttachAs=usertype)"
Open #1,Opts$ + "somebody" As "Email"
Print #1;"This is bold and this is underlined."
Get #1,-1799,1;Cid$
Print #1;""
Print #1;"This is after the image."
Add #1,-1,1;"apicture.jpg","image/jpeg"
Close #1
o The MySQL SQL driver now supports a "DateIsLocal=True" open option to
enable conversion of date-only column values to a local date and a
local time of midnight. This option may be needed in some time zones
(such as New Zealand) to obtain the expected local date. The option
may also be placed in the DL4MYSQL runtime parameter.
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver now supports a "DateIsLocal=True" open option
to enable conversion of date-only column values to a local date and a
local time of midnight. This option may be needed in some time zones
(such as New Zealand) to obtain the expected local date.
o The MySQL SQL and Oracle SQL drivers have been extended to support the
"MAP #c;" statement which restores physical mapping of columns after
"MAP RECORD" has set a logical mapping.
o The RENUMBER command now supports a "-e" option to renumber programs that
have statements that reference non-existent line numbers instead of
printing an error message.
o A new sample library, tools/txt2pdf.lib, has been added to demonstrate
producing a PDF file from simple text.
o Behavior change: dL4 normally turns the cursor off in windows unless an
input is in progress. Beginning with this release, dL4 will NOT turn off
the cursor if the application is using single character non-echoed binary
or 'IOBC' input. The application is presumed to be handling input editing
itself and the application is given the responsibility for controlling
cursor display. This change improves performance for slow networks.
o Bug fixed: printing the input mode restore string from "GET #-3,-1083;S$"
caused echo to be enabled when it should have been disabled.
o Bug fixed: the screen cursor was sometimes disabled after a SYSTEM
statement was executed.
Jul 22, 2009 (Maintenance Release 9.1.1)
o Bug fix: programming a function key with the 'PGMFN' mnemonic sometimes
caused non-function keys to be programmed to the same value.
o Bug fix: arrays of structures could not be indexed in conditional
breakpoints or debugger "LET" commands.
May 22, 2009 (Release 9.1)
o The major release number of dL4 has been increased from 7 to 9 to
match the major release of UniBasic. This numbering makes it
easier to support combined dL4 and UniBasic licenses on Unix and
Linux systems.
o Global variables can now be created by "OPTION GLOBAL COM ON" and the COM
statement. The new program option causes variables in COM statements to
be passed to external procedures and to all subsequent programs invoked by
CHAIN, CALL, or SWAP. Global COM variables can also be passed to spawned
programs using a new SPAWN statement mode. Unlike traditional COM
variables, global COM variables do not require each program to receive and
pass on each COM variable. For example, if program "A" calls program "B"
which calls program "C", program "C" can use global COM variables from
program "A" even if program "B" does not use those global COM variables.
Each program that defines or uses global COM variables must have the
GLOBAL COM option enabled. If a program does not have the GLOBAL COM
option enabled, any existing global COM variables will persist and can
be used by subsequent programs. Global COM variables are not preserved
by "long" CHAIN statements or between SCOPE command lines. Global COM
variables are created when COM statements allocate variables. Once
created, a global COM variable can be accessed by any program declaring
the same variable name in a COM statement or using a unDIMmed variable
of the same name. If a program uses "OPTION GLOBAL COM ON" and "OPTION
AUTODIM OFF", then global COM variables must be explicitly imported with
a COM statement. To explicitly import a string or array global variable
with a COM statement, the dimensions must match the original values or
the variable will be re-dimensioned. Global COM structure variables must
be imported with a COM statement or declared with the new DECLARE DIM
statement in order to define the structure type.
An error 289, "Error initializing global COM variables", will occur if
an internal error is detected when passing global COM variables to a
SPAWNed program.
In the following example, the program "main" creates two global COM
variables and then calls "subpgm" which uses the COM variables.
Program "main"
Option Default Global Com On
Com 3%,CurrRec,CustName$[60]
Dim 2%,N
CurrRec = 10
CustName$ = "Example"
N = 19 ! Note that N is not a global variable
Call "subpgm"
Program "subpgm"
Option Default Global Com On
Print CurrRec,CustName$
Print N ! Displays "0" because N isn't a global variable
End
o Two new statements, DECLARE COM and DECLARE DIM have been added so that
programs can define the structure type of global COM variables. Example:
Declare Dim Rec. As CUSTREC
o Additional modes have been added to the SWAP statement to control how
global COM variables are passed. Modes 1 and 2 (the default) pass
global COM variables to the SWAP program, but the parent program will
not see any changes in the COM variables when the SWAP program exits.
The new mode 3 (pass COM and open channels) and mode 4 (pass COM only)
pass global COM variables and return any changed values to the parent
program.
o Additional modes have been added to the intrinsic CALL SwapF() to control
how global COM variables are passed. Modes 1 and 2 pass global COM
variables to the SWAP program, but the parent program will not see any
changes in the COM variables when the SWAP program exits. The new mode 4
(pass COM only) and mode 5 (pass COM and open channels) pass global COM
variables and return any changed values to the parent program.
o An optional mode parameter has been added to the SPAWN statement to control
whether global COM variables are passed. Global COM variables are passed
to the spawned program only if mode 1 is specified. If the mode is not
specified or if the mode is zero, global COM variables are not passed.
Syntax:
SPAWN Program$,PortNum
SPAWN Mode,Program$,PortNum
Example:
Spawn 1,"runreport",P ! Spawn program and pass global variables
o The SIZE command in SCOPE BASIC mode has been extended to display the
total size of the global COM variables.
o When converting IMS programs, IMS GDIM statements are converted to COM
statements. The statement "OPTION DEFAULT DIALECT IMS1" or "OPTION
DEFAULT GLOBAL COM ON" must be added to enable global COM variable
behavior. The conversion profile in the IMS2DL4 utility adds both of
these options as it converts programs.
o When converting IMS programs, IMS style structure definition and
DIM statements are converted to dL4 format.
o When converting IMS programs, long function names with a single
argument without parentheses ("DTDAY$ N") are now accepted.
o "TRAP" statements in IMS programs are now translated to ERROR statements
when converting IMS programs.
o A new program option, "OPTION DIALECT IMS1", has been implemented to
enable IMS compatibility features beyond those of "OPTION DIALECT IMS".
The new IMS1 option enables "OPTION GLOBAL COM ON" and "OPTION CALL
DL4ERROR ON".
o A new program option, "OPTION CALL DL4ERROR ON", has been implemented to
enable calling the subprogram "dl4error" whenever an error occurs before
invoking any local error handler (such as TRY or IF ERR). If the debugger
is in use, the error will be reported in the debugger before the "dl4error"
subprogram is run. The subprogram is loaded by first searching the
directory of the current program and then the normal program search list
(LIBSTRING and/or DL4LUST). If the subprogram "dl4error" cannot be found,
normal error handling will proceed. The "dl4error" subprogram is passed
four parameters: the error number, the line number of the error, the
name of the program in which the error occurred, and the error handler
status. The error handler status is 0 if there was no IF ERR, ERRSET, or
ERRSTM handler set, 1 if there was, and 2 if the error handler was set
to a REM statement ("IF ERR 0 REM"). If an error occurs within the
"dl4error" subprogram, normal error handling is used and "dl4error" will
not be called recursively.
o A new statement, CHAIN WRITE IF, has been added to perform a CHAIN WRITE
without reporting an error if any of the variables weren't dimensioned.
Example:
CHAIN WRITE IF SubTotal, Filename$
o When converting IMS BASIC programs, CHAIN READ and CHAIN WRITE statements
are now converted to CHAIN READ IF and CHAIN WRITE IF statements to
duplicate the less restrictive rules used by IMS BASIC.
o A new intrinsic CALL, IMSChkCh(), has been added to improve the
performance of converted IMS BASIC programs. The CALL can find
which channel, if any, a specified filename is open on. If the
specified filename is "", the CALL returns the read/write status
of the specified channel and the filename open on that channel.
The return status has the values 0 (not open), 1 (open for reading
only), and 2 (open for reading and writing).
BASIC syntax:
Call IMSChkChnl(Channel,Filename$,Status)
Call IMSChkChnl(Mode,Channel,Filename$,Status)
Where:
Mode is an optional and ignored parameter.
Channel is the channel on which the filename is open or
receives the channel number on which Filename$ is open.
Filename$ is the filename to search for or, if the original
filename is "", receives the filename open on the
specified channel.
Status receives the channel status (0 for not open, 1 for
read only, and 2 for read/write).
o A new intrinsic CALL, FieldVal(), has been added to improve the
performance of converted IMS BASIC programs. CALL FieldVal() validates
whether string contains a valid alphabetic, floating point, integer,
date, or month value according to the specified mode.
BASIC syntax:
Call FieldVal(Mode,Field$,Status)
Where:
Mode is the field format to check for.
Mode 1 - check if Field$ contains only alphabetic or
space characters.
Mode 2 - check if Field$ contains an integer or
floating point number (no exponent) with
optional leading spaces.
Mode 4 - check if Field$ contains an integer value
with optional leading spaces.
Mode 8 - check if Field$ contains a MDDYY, MMDDYY,
MDDYYYY, or MMDDYYYY date value with optional
leading or trailing spaces.
Mode 16 - check if Field$ contains an integer month
number (1-12) with optional leading spaces.
Field$ is the field value to validate.
Status is set to 0 if the field is valid and 1 if the
field is not valid.
o A new intrinsic function, DTPart(), has been added to improve the
performance of converted IMS BASIC programs. The function extracts
parts of an IMS date/time value.
BASIC syntax:
PartValue = DTPart(IMSDateValue, Part)
Where:
IMSDateValue is an IMS date value DDDDD.SSSSS.
Part selects the date/time value to be extracted from
IMSDateValue.
1 - year (1 - 9999)
2 - quarter (1 - 4)
3 - month (1 - 12)
4 - day of year (1 - 366)
5 - day of month (1 - 31)
6 - day of week (0 - 6)
7 - week of year (1 - 53)
8 - hour of day (0 - 23)
9 - minute of hour (0 - 59)
10 - second of minute (0 - 59)
o A new intrinsic function, DTFormat$(), has been added to improve the
performance of converted IMS BASIC programs. The function formats
an IMS date/time value according to a mask.
BASIC syntax:
Date$ = DTFormat(IMSDateValue, Mask$)
Where:
IMSDateValue is an IMS date value DDDDD.SSSSS.
Mask$ is a DateUsing$() style mask.
o A new intrinsic CALL, SplitStr(), has been added to split a string into
substrings according to a specified separator character. CALL SplitStr()
is compatible with the IMS CALL $PARSE or CALL 22.
BASIC syntax:
Call SplitStr({Mode,} {Status,} Sep$, Src$, Field1$ {,Field2$}...)
Where:
Mode is 0 or unspecified for standard mode which skips to the
next "Fieldn$" parameter if the current parameter is too
small for the current field. Mode 1 truncates and ignores
any extra characters. Mode 2 reports overflow as a status
of 1 or an error 38 if the status parameter isn't used.
Status is a numeric variable in which status is returned.
Sep$ is a string value specifying a single character terminator.
Src$ is the source string value to split.
FieldN$ are string variables in which field values are returned.
If the number of field variables exceeds the number of
fields, the variable following the final field will be
set to "".
o A new intrinsic CALL, IMSCheckDigits(), has been added to support IMS
programs. The CALL is similar to CALL CheckDigits() checking if a
string contains any non-digit characters, but the status is returned in
a numeric parameter instead of causing an error. An all numeric string
or an empty string ("") return a status of 0. A status of 1 is returned
if a non-digit character is found.
BASIC syntax:
Call IMSCheckDigits(S$,R)
Where:
S$ is a string value to check.
R is a numeric variable in which the status is returned
(0 if only digit characters are found and 1 if any
non-digit characters are encountered).
o A new intrinsic CALL, IMSCheckNumber(), has been added to support IMS
programs. The CALL is similar to CALL CheckNumber() checking if a
string contains an invalid number string, but the status is returned in
a numeric parameter instead of causing an error. A valid number string
or an empty string ("") return a status of 0. Any other string value
returns a status of 1.
BASIC syntax:
Call IMSCheckNumber(S$,R)
Where:
S$ is a string value to check.
R is a numeric variable in which the status is returned
(0 if a valid number of "" is found and 1 if an invalid
number is encountered).
o A new intrinsic CALL Redir() has been added to support converted IMS
programs. The CALL causes INPUT statements to read from a specified
channel or file. Normal input is restored when the channel or file
reports an error or end of file.
BASIC syntax:
Call Redir(Channel)
Call Redir(Path$)
Where:
Channel is a channel open to a text file.
Path$ is a path of a text file.
o New intrinsic CALLs InitBuf(), ReadBuf(), and WriteBuf() have been added
to support converted IMS programs. The CALLs are used to create and
access a virtual record in memory which is used to pass values between
CHAINed or SWAPped programs.
BASIC syntax:
Call InitBuf(Size)
Call ReadBuf(Offset {,Variable})
Call WriteBuf(Offset {,Variable})
Where:
Size the number of bytes to allocate for a virtual record
which is stored in memory and persists between programs.
Offset the byte offset to write to or read from within the
virtual record.
Variable one or more numeric or string variables to write from
or read to.
o A new intrinsic CALL InpEdit() has been added to support converted IMS
programs.
BASIC syntax:
Call InpEdit(Mode)
The "Mode" parameter is a numeric expression containing a sum of the
following option values:
The value 1, if set, enables extended input edit features such as
insert toggling and causes control characters to be ignored if
entered as data.
The value 2, if set, enables lowercase to uppercase conversion.
The value 4, if set, is not supported and causes an error 38.
o A new intrinsic string function, GMTDATEUSING$(), has been added to
format dates using GMT dates and times. The GMTDATEUSING$() function
is otherwise identical to the DATEUSING$() function.
o Enhancement: the intrinsic CALL INPBUF now accepts an optional channel
number as the first argument.
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver DTOC() and DTON() functions have been extended
with ".sssss" and "sssss" date mask format codes. These codes support IMS
style date/time values in which the integer portion of a number is the
date in days and the first five digits to the right of the decimal point
contain the time of day in seconds since midnight. For IMS compatible
values, the DDDDDBASEDATE option must be used in the profile to specify
a base year of 1900. Example:
[FullISAMBridge]
File=datebase.table
OpenAs=MySQL Full-ISAM
OpenInProfileDirectory=False
DDDDDBaseDate=1900
.
.
Field=DATE1N,60,3%,,,DTON("DDDDD.SSSSS")
.
.
Field=DATE2,100,11,,,DTOC("DDDDD.SSSSS")
o A new key part option, DESCDTOC(), has been implemented to support "DDDDD"
or "DDDDDD" format descending key parts in bridge profiles when used with
Microsoft SQL Server. The DESCDTOC() option is similar to the DTOC()
option. The option is currently restricted to "DDDDD" or "DDDDDD" masks.
The option value is generated by subtracting the date in days from 100000.
Example:
KeyPart=INVDATE,0,5,"","0123456789",DESCDTOC("DDDDD")
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver has been extended to support a DESCDTOCBASE
option in the main bridge profile section to change the offset value
used by the DESCDTOC() translation function from its default value of
100000. Example:
DESCDTOCBASE=99999
o The IC2FI (tools/ic2fi) utility has been extended to support the new
DESCDTOC() key part option and the DESCDTOCBASE option.
o The IC2FI (tools/ic2fi) utility has been extended to accept "FILE=" lines
in the bridge profile.
o The IC2FI (tools/ic2fi) utility now accepts underscores in index names.
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver now supports a "NOSORT" option on key part
definitions to allow a key part to use a DTOC() or DTON() date mask that
does not sort correctly (such as "MMDDYYYY"). This option is intended
to be used temporarily while converting a file with the IC2FI utility.
When used, the NOSORT option must precede the DTOC() or DTON() option.
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver now supports options to skip any keys that
have values matching the keypart prefix values. The "SkipIfPrefix=True"
option can be set in the first section of the bridge profile to enable
skipping on all indexes. A "Skip" option can be added to one of the key
parts in an index definition to enable skipping on that specific index.
Skipping should be enabled when using ROPEN to read through record locks
so that the driver will ignore any temporary records. This option should
not be used unless the prefix values are such that they will never match
any actual key values. Example:
KeyPart=NAME,0,16,"ZZZZZZZZ","0123456789",SKIP
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver has been extended to support
the DESCENDING option on index members.
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM and MySQL Full-ISAM drivers now
support CALL READREF(). As in all other drivers, record locking is now
disabled only when both the write protection ("W") and locking disabled
("L") options are used. In previous releases, the write protection
option by itself disabled record locking.
o Behavior change: the Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver now supports
database identifiers (such as column or index names) of up to 127
characters.
o The 'PGMFN' and 'PGMHELPFN' mnemonics have been extended to support
programming of any key. The mnemonic sequence
PChr$("c","text");'PGMFN'
will program the key that normally produces the character "c" to generate
the string "text". A new check box, "Program Keys", has been added to
the "Preferences -> Window Options" dialog to allow the user to disable
keyboard programming. This option can be used to immediately disable
programming during application development if the keyboard is programmed
incorrectly.
o A new mnemonic, 'WCCU', has been defined to simplify clearing the values
of a range of GUI elements. The mnemonic string '5,7WCCU' clears the
GUI elements 5, 6, and 7. The upper limit of the element range can
exceed the highest existing element number. The 'WCCU' mnemonic can also
be used with a single parameter to clear a single GUI element.
o The GUI libraries in the tools directory have been enhanced. A new
library, gui4.lib, has been added.
o All "Preferences" dialogs have been changed to apply options to the
current session. The new option values will take effect when the "OK"
or "Apply" buttons are selected. It is no longer necessary to restart dL4
to use the new option values. The "Font Size", "Window Options", and
"Frame" dialogs have "Apply" buttons which apply any changes but leave the
dialog active so that changes can be tested before exiting the dialogs.
Selecting the "Cancel" button does not undo changes made by the "Apply"
button.
o A "Preferences->Attributes" dialog has been added to configure how
character attributes such as underline, reverse video, or protection
are displayed. The dialog can be used to map any attribute or combination
of attributes to a different set of attributes or colors. For example,
the logical attribute of "protected" normally causes characters to be
displayed as dimmed. In the "Attributes" dialog, this can be changed so
that protected characters are displayed as green characters by selecting
the logical attribute "Protected" in the "Current Definition", setting
the color with the "Foreground" button, and then selecting the "Set"
and "OK" buttons. Changing the attribute mapping effects all future
output, but it does not redraw the current window or history buffer.
The displayed attributes of protected characters can be changed, but
protected characters always have the attribute of "protected".
o The "Preferences->Font" dialog has been replaced with a new "Font Size"
dialog. The new "Font Size" dialog has color buttons to control the
default foreground and background colors. Check boxes have been added to
select a "Maximum Size" or "Stretch to Screen" window. A maximum size
window uses the maximum size of the selected font that allows the window
to fit on the screen. The "Stretch to Screen" window is similar to the
maximum size window but may change the character aspect ratio so that the
window is larger (note that "stretching" will have no effect if there is
insufficient space to add one pixel to each character or if the font does
not support changing the aspect ratio).
Changes in the font, font color, font size, or window size are applied to
the main window when the "OK" or "Apply" buttons are selected. Only the
window text is redrawn: all non-character graphics and pictures will
disappear. All graphical elements such as buttons, edit boxes, or list
boxes will be unchanged. Due to these limitations, it is best to apply
font changes before or after running applications. Selecting the "Cancel"
button does not undo changes made by the "Apply" button.
o The "Preferences->Window" dialog has been renamed as "Window Options".
All options in the dialog are applied immediately to the current session
when the "OK" or "Apply" buttons are selected. The foreground and
background color buttons have been moved to the new "Font Size" dialog.
The "CL/CE History" check box controls whether text deleted by the 'CL'
or 'CE' mnemonics is added to the history buffer (if the history buffer
itself is enabled). The "Shade History" check box controls whether text
in the history buffer is displayed using the original colors or with
inverted colors. Dimming of protected characters is now configured
in the "Preferences->Attributes" dialog and so the "No Dim BP" check box
has been removed.
o The "Preferences->Frame" dialog has been modified to remove the "Menu Bar"
check box. The "Menu Bar" check box is now displayed only in the
"Window Options" dialog. All options in the dialog are applied immediately
to the current session when the "OK" or "Apply" buttons are selected.
o A "Mute" item has been added to the "Edit" menu to disable the terminal
bell. Selecting the "Mute" item toggles the state of the mute switch.
If a check mark is displayed, the bell is muted.
o The "Preferences -> Keyboard" dialog has been enhanced to allow "Unicode
to Input Action" to modify parts of existing Unicode ranges instead of
requiring the user to delete and then reenter the unchanged portions.
o A new "-S" option for the LOADSAVE utility adds an initial comment to
the output program file that specifies the date, time, source path, and
current user when the program was compiled.
o A new runtime parameter, "DL4CONTIG", is now supported to define the
default character set and numeric map type for newly created indexed
contiguous and contiguous files. The DL4CONTIG parameter supports
the CHARSET, NUMMAP, and COUNTUSED options used in the BUILD statement.
For example, setting DL4CONTIG to "charset=IRIS,nummap=IEEE" would
cause the statement
BUILD #1,"[10:40]file"
to build a contiguous file that used the IRIS character set and IEEE
numerics. This new feature can be used to make new files match the
format of old files so that MAT READ and MAT WRITE statements can
copy records as strings even though the records contain non-standard
numeric formats.
o A minimal UniBasic program file driver has been added so that the QUERY
utility can report UniBasic program files as such rather than as text
files.
o Enhancement: the FILE command and all program dumps now display channel
functions up to 16.
o Behavior change: the command history in SCOPE now retains the current
history position so that repeated "down arrow" commands can be used to
report a previous sequence of commands.
o Behavior change: the email driver no longer inserts multiple spaces when
breaking a long subject string into multiple lines. The driver now tries
to break the subject string on a word boundary and otherwise inserts a
single space.
o A new function, MSC$(10), has been implemented to return the path of
the program, if any, that CHAINed to the current program.
o The dl4login terminal service utility now sets the environment variables
"DL4LOGINNAME" to the user login name and "DL4LOGINDOMAIN" to the user
login domain name. These values can be used in user profiles to set
values expected by applications such as "LOGNAME".
o The SYSTEM statement mode has been extended to control whether the
WINDOW OPEN statement creates a window with scrolling enabled. The
statement "SYSTEM 36" causes the next WINDOW OPEN statement to create a
non-scrolling window. The normal mode of creating windows with scrolling
is restored after the execution of a WINDOW OPEN statement or it can be
explicitly restored by the statement "SYSTEM 37".
o The syntax 'BUILD #c;"X",..." is now accepted and converted to a standard
BUILD statement when converting IMS programs.
o Behavior change: the number of records value in file specifications (the
"N" in "[N:R]") is now optional when building contiguous or indexed
contiguous files.
o Arrays of structures can now be passed as "AS *" parameters. An "AS *"
parameter that is an array use subscripts so that individual structure
elements can be passed to other routines or to intrinsic such as SQLV$().
o The tools/query utility now allows quotation marks around the driver
name if the "AS" option is used.
o The number of Indexed Contiguous file indexes that can be simultaneously
opened is no longer restricted by the value of the ISAMFILES runtime
parameter. The internal tables are dynamically expanded as necessary
if ISAMFILES is too small. Note that operating system limits may still
apply on the maximum number of open files or record locks.
o Rules for converting "CALL $CALLSTAT" have been added to the IRIS and BITS
program conversion profiles tools/convert.prf and tools/convbits.prf.
o Behavior change: records in converted UniBasic data files that exceed the
standard Portable or Universal file size limits but are within the 2
gigabyte size limit are now accessible and will no longer cause illegal
record number errors. The MAKEUNIV utility can now convert non-portable
UniBasic files that exceed the standard Portable or Universal file size
limits.
o A new channel function, CHF(17cc), has been implemented in the MySQL SQL
driver to return one if the current result set has one or more rows and
zero if the result set is empty. This provides compatibility with the
Oracle SQL driver.
o Beta behavior change: the "Preferences -> Font Size" dialog no longer
changes all of the text to the current foreground and background colors
when a font change is applied or saved. Text colors are now changed
only in text that used the previous colors and only if the foreground or
background colors have been updated.
o Bug fixed: the "CHECK -n" command sometimes caused memory violations.
o Bug fixed: programs that used structure variables exceeding the maximum
number of members did not report errors when SAVEd. Structure variables
in dL4 cannot have more than 255 members or more than a total of 1023
members including members in sub-structures.
o Bug fixed: fonts were not displayed correctly on some systems such as
Windows 98 systems with only 16 color displays.
o Bug fixed: the "line GO" command in the debugger did not work correctly
if "line" was the current line number.
o Bug fixed: each open of the MySQL SQL driver caused a small memory leak.
o Bug fix: the LOADSAVE utility did not report I/O errors encountered
while reading the source file.
o Bug fix: the IC2FI (tools/ic2fi) utility could not create new bridge
profiles on Windows systems.
o Bug fixed: when using "OPTION ARGUMENT CHECKING IS WEAK" and a CALL
statement was at the end of a single line IF and the final argument was
an array, the CALL statement was not properly encoded causing an error
208 at runtime. Programs where this error occurs must be recompiled
to correct the encoding.
o Bug fixed: the statement "CALL ENV(1,Name$,Value$)" returned without
changing "Value$" if the environment variable value was larger than the
DIMmed size of "Value$".
o Beta bug fixed: "SPAWN 1" failed if the number of global COM variables
was less than 25.
o Beta bug fixed: the number of global COM variables could not exceed 24.
o Beta bug fixed: "OPTION CALL DL4ERROR ON" only passed the first three
parameters to "dl4error" and did not pass the error handler status.
o Beta bug fixed: CALL ReadBuf() returned random values if data was read
from an offset that hadn't been previous written with CALL WriteBuf().
Such reads now return zeroed data.
o Beta bug fixed: an address violation sometimes occurred when entering
the debugger.
o Beta bug fixed: the APPLY buttons in the "Preferences" dialogs updated
the running session but did not save the new options in the registry.
o Beta bug fixed: the "Preferences -> Font Size" dialog did not display
font names correctly on Windows 98/ME systems.
Jan 5, 2009 (Maintenance Release 7.3.2)
o New intrinsic functions, SQLEQV$(), SQLEQD$(), and SQLEQDT$(), have been
added for use with the Oracle SQL and MySQL SQL drivers. The functions
are identical to the SQLV$(), SQLD$(), and SQLDT$() functions except that
they prefix the encoded value with an "=" symbol if the value is not
NULL and generate "IS NULL" if the value is NULL. Using these functions
simplify the generation of WHERE clauses when the values may be NULL.
o A new intrinsic CALL, SpaceStr(), has been added to initialize variables.
Syntax:
Call SpaceStr(Variable {,...})
Where:
Variable A variable of any type. String variables, string arrays,
and the string members of structures will be filled with
spaces. All other variable types will be zeroed as in
the CLEAR statement.
o Bug fixed: memory violations occurred after the intrinsic function
CallStat$() or other functions were used with smaller than expected
argument strings.
o Bug fixed: numeric query results with a large number of decimal places
caused an error 70 ("Data read error") in the MySQL SQL driver.
o Bug fixed: numeric query results with a large number of decimal places
caused an error 70 ("Data read error") in the Oracle SQL driver.
o Bug fixed: SEARCH mode 7, which returns the number of active records,
returned the true value plus one if record zero was deleted.
o Bug fixed: a memory leak sometimes occurred if the debugger was first
entered while in a SWAPped program.
Jul 11, 2008 (Maintenance Release 7.3.1)
o The Oracle SQL driver now sets the session to use "CURSOR_SHARING=SIMILAR"
to improve performance through SQL statement caching.
o A new channel function, CHF(17cc), has been implemented in the Oracle SQL
driver to return one if the current result set has one or more rows and
zero if the result set is empty. This function is faster than CHF(cc)
if the exact number of rows is not needed.
o The auxiliary printer, "Terminal Printer", and "Windows Terminal Printer"
drivers now support the 'LITNUL' and 'LITCR' mnemonics on printers that
have the "Binary=True" option. The 'LITNUL' mnemonic is used to output
a binary zero character to a printer. The 'LITCR' mnemonic is used to
output a carriage return without a linefeed to a printer that has the
"CRToCRNL" option enabled.
o DEL characters ("\177\") are now passed to the auxiliary printer for use
with the "Binary=True" option.
o The "Terminal Printer" and "Window Terminal Printer" drivers now support
writing binary variables ("B?") to printers that have the "Binary=True"
option enabled.
o Bug fixed: commands in the form "BREAK IF ..." caused random error
messages instead of format/syntax errors.
Jun 3, 2008 (Release 7.3)
o A new driver, "Oracle SQL", has been implemented so that applications
can use SQL statements to issue commands and queries to an Oracle
database server. Both standard SQL statements and Oracle specific syntax
can be used. The driver interface is essentially identical to the MySQL
SQL driver. SQL statements are executed with SEARCH statements and
standard READ or READ RECORD statements are used to read the results.
Unlike the MySQL driver, the Oracle SQL driver supports the standard
timeout option on the SEARCH statement and will interrupt any operation
if an escape or interrupt key is pressed.
While both Oracle and MySQL implement standard SQL statements, they differ
in details and offer different enhancements to the standard SQL syntax.
For example, the "INTO" keyword of the SQL INSERT statement is optional in
MySQL, but it is required in Oracle. Additionally, unquoted identifier
names in Oracle are converted to all uppercase letters, but quoted Oracle
identifiers are case sensitive. Note that the SQLN$(), SQLSN$(), SQLNV$(),
and SQLSNV$() intrinsic functions produce quoted identifiers which will
be case sensitive unless the UCID open option is used. Please see Oracle
documentation for a full description of Oracle SQL syntax.
The filename in a Oracle SQL OPEN statement has the format
"server_name:database_name" where "server_name:" is optional and can
specify either a server name or a server IP address. The Oracle SQL
driver recognizes the following open options:
"user=..." user name, optional if provided elsewhere.
"password=..." password, optional if provided elsewhere.
"pswd=..." password, optional if provided elsewhere.
"port=..." optional port number.
"rows=..." optional number of rows to prefetch on queries.
"rtrim=..." optional boolean value which, if true, removes all
trailing spaces from results (default FALSE).
"scroll=..." optional boolean value which, if false, disables
scrollable result sets (default TRUE). A scrollable
result set cannot contain LONG character or binary
values.
"string=..." optional boolean value which, if true, allows all
result set values to be read as strings regardless of
the actual column date type (default FALSE).
"ucid=..." optional boolean value which, if true, forces all
identifiers from SQLN$(), SQLSN$(), SQLNV$(), and
SQLSNV$() to uppercase (default FALSE).
Example:
Open #5,"(user=public,pswd=xyz,rtrim=t)dbsrvr2:orcl" As "Oracle SQL"
The Oracle SQL driver supports numeric, character, date, date/time, and
binary data types. Other data types are supported only if the application
use SQL conversion functions to produce generate standard data types.
User defined data types are not supported. Queries returning long or
"very long" character or binary columns are supported only if the
"scroll=false" option is used on the OPEN statement. If the "scroll=false"
option is used, all access to result sets must be sequential and the
CHF(channel) function cannot be used to obtain the number of rows returned.
The Oracle SQL driver, when a channel is closed, rolls back any pending
transaction for which a COMMIT has not been executed. The open option
"COMMIT=TRUE" can be used to prevent this rollback if desired. Clearing
a channel always performs a rollback for pending operations. The COMMIT
option can also be specified in the DL4ORACLESQL environment variable.
The Oracle SQL driver uses Oracle version 10 or version 11 libraries.
These libraries are not supplied as part of dL4. In order to use the
Oracle driver, the libraries must be installed either in the dL4
installation directory (usually "\Program Files\dL4") or the full path
of the Oracle library directory must be added to the PATH environment
variable. The Oracle libraries can be obtained by downloading the
Oracle "Instant Client" package from www.oracle.com.
The Oracle version 11 libraries produce debugging and diagnostic logs by
default. This logging can be disabled in the sqlnet.ora configuration
file. A sample sqlnet.ora file is supplied in the dL4 "Tools" directory.
The file can be used by setting the environment variable TNS_ADMIN to point
at the "Tools" directory. A full description of the sqlnet.ora file
and other Oracle configuration files can be found in documentation
supplied by Oracle.
The DL4ORACLESQL environment variable can be used to supply default
values for the server name, database name, user name, or password. In
addition, default values for the "commit", "rows", "rtrim", "string", and
"ucid" open options can be specified in the DL4ORACLESQL value. Example:
DL4ORACLESQL=server=192.168.100.2,user=acctng,password=notsecret
export DL4ORACLESQL
The Oracle SQL driver is currently supported only on the Linux 32-bit x86,
Linux 64-bit x86, and Windows platforms. Other platforms will be
supported in the future based on demand and the availability of the
Oracle libraries.
o The Oracle SQL and the MySQL SQL drivers support the new mode 16 of the
CHF() function to return the last Oracle or MySQL specific error code.
These error codes provide more detailed information than the standard dL4
error codes, but the error codes are specific to the database and may even
vary between versions of Oracle or MySQL.
o The DL4DRIVERS runtime parameter has been enhanced to accept an "Oracle"
or "Oracle SQL" option to select the Oracle SQL driver as the default SQL
driver. If this option is used, an OPEN AS "SQL" statement will use the
Oracle SQL driver instead of the MySQL SQL driver.
o The Oracle SQL driver supports using the ADD statement to insert multiple
rows to a table from an array of structures. This special ADD statement
offers significantly increased performance when inserting large numbers
of rows to a table. The syntax of the statement is
ADD #c;TableName$,ColumnNames$,Rows.[]
where:
TableName$ is the name of the table to which the rows will be
added. The table name must match the case of the
actual table name.
ColumnNames$ is a comma separated list of column names to set in
each row. This list can be produced by the SQLN$()
function.
Rows.[] is an array of structures where each structure contains
the values of a row to be inserted. Note that all
elements of the array will be added to the table. The
members in the structure must match the order of the
column names in "ColumnNames$".
If all of the inserts are successful, they will be committed when the ADD
statement finishes. If any of the inserts fail, all of the inserts will
be rolled back.
To further increase performance, but at the cost of increased disk space,
record number 4 can be specified in the ADD statement:
ADD #c,4;TableName$,ColumnNames$,Rows.[]
Record number 1 can be used in the ADD statement to enable date formatting
rules similar to those of the SQLDT$() function (see below). If the
record number is set to 5, both the date formatting option of record 1
and the insert optimization of record 4 will be enabled.
o The Oracle SQL driver supports a SORTCI option to select case insensitive
sorting and comparing of strings. The option causes the driver to execute
the statements
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_SORT=BINARY_CI
ALTER SESSION SET NLS_COMP=LINGUISTIC
immediately after the connection is opened. Using this option can have
significant performance costs (see the Oracle documentation for NLS_SORT
and NLS_COMP for details). The SORTCI option can be set either in an
OPEN statement or in the DL4ORACLESQL environment variable. Examples:
Open #5,"(sortci=true)acctdb" As "Oracle SQL"
DL4ORACLESQL=sortci=true
o The Oracle SQL and MySQL SQL drivers support a NADNULL option to convert
null date values in a result set to "not-a-date" values (the same as
"CLEAR var#"). The option also converts "not-a-date" values in SQLV$(),
SQLNV$(), and SQLSNV$() to SQL NULLs. The NADNULL option can be set either
in an OPEN statement or in the DL4ORACLESQL/DL4MYSQL environment variables.
Examples:
Open #5,"(nadnull=true)acctdb" As "Oracle SQL"
DL4ORACLESQL=nadnull=true
Open #5,"(nadnull=true)acctdb" As "MySQL SQL"
DL4MYSQL=nadnull=true
o A new intrinsic function, SQLDT$(), has been added for use with SQL
drivers such as the "MySQL SQL" or "Oracle SQL" driver. The SQLDT$()
function is identical to the SQLV$() function except that it tells SQL
drivers to format all 1% precision date/time variable values as date only
values. Date values with 2% or 3% precision are formatted as date and
time values.
o A new intrinsic function, SQLSNDT$(), has been added for use with SQL
drivers such as the "MySQL SQL" or "Oracle SQL" driver. The SQLSNDT$()
function is identical to the SQLSNV$() function except that it tells
SQL drivers to format all 1% precision date/time variable values as date
only values. Date values with 2% or 3% precision are formatted as date
and time values.
o The intrinsic function SQLN$() has been enhanced so that it can be used to
add database specific quotation marks around identifiers that are supplied
as strings. Example:
A$ = SQLN$("Special Name")
o The Oracle SQL and MySQL SQL drivers now support the standard dL4 GET
statement operations to obtain result set column names and types. Example:
Search #1,"Select * from customers"
I = 0
Do
Try Get #1,0,I;Opts[I],TypeFmt[I],Name$[I] Else Exit Do
I = I + 1
Loop
o The SCOPE debugger window now supports a scroll back history buffer. The
size of the history buffer is controlled by the main window history option
but has a minimum size of 5 pages.
o The BREAK command now supports two forms of conditional breakpoints. The
command
BREAK position IF expression
will stop execution at "position" if and only if "expression" is true.
For example, the command "break 100 if a>4" will stop at line 100 (before
executing the line) if the variable "a" has a value greater than 4. The
expression can only use variables that are visible at the specified
position. If an error occurs while evaluating the expression, the
expression value is treated as false. A breakpoint expression uses the
same syntax as expressions in dL4 and supports the following built-in
functions: ABS(), HEX$(), HEX?(), INT(), LEN(), MONTH(), MONTHDAY(),
MSC(), NOT(), SPC(), and YEAR(). Variables used in the expression do not
have to be allocated when the breakpoint is set, but the expression will
be considered to be false until the variables are allocated.
The second form of conditional breakpoint checks the specified expression
before executing each line rather than just the specified line. The
program stops if the expression is true. If execution is continued, the
program will not stop again unless the expression first becomes false.
The command
BREAK position FOR expression
compiles "expression" as if it was in the same procedure as "position".
If the program enters a procedure or subprogram, the breakpoint expression
will continue to be tested using the variables visible at "position". If
the program uses recursion, the breakpoint will be tested using the
variables of each recursion level. The command "BREAK FOR expression"
uses the variables that are currently visible to the debugger or immediate
execution mode.
Conditional expressions can be used with external breakpoints by using
the "XBREAK position IF expression", "XBREAK FOR expression", or
"XBREAK position FOR expression" commands.
o Breakpoint counts can be set so that a breakpoint does not occur when the
breakpoint condition is first satisfied, but instead waits until the Nth
occurrence of the condition. The optional count is specified by adding a
comma and number (the count) after the breakpoint condition. For example,
the following command would set a breakpoint such that the fifth execution
of line 100 would cause a breakpoint:
break 100,5
Breakpoint counts can be used with simple positional breakpoints,
conditional breakpoints, and "BREAK IF ERROR" breakpoints.
o Breakpoints can now be deleted by number. The command "nobreak -N" where
"N" is a number, deletes breakpoint "N". The number associated with a
breakpoint can be determined by using the "status breakpoints" command
to display all breakpoints. Example:
nobreak -2
o When a breakpoint is set by position, the position is now adjusted to the
first executable line at or following the specified position. In the
following program:
10 Rem comment line 1
20 Rem comment line 2
30 Rem comment line 3
40 Print X
setting a breakpoint on line 20 ("break 20") would actually set a
breakpoint at line 40. In previous dL4 releases, the breakpoint would
never occur because dL4 skips across blocks of non-executable lines.
The BREAK command warns the user whenever a breakpoint position is
adjusted.
o The Windows Terminal driver now implements an additional window style,
"HISTORY". The "HISTORY" style creates a window that has a vertical
scroll bar and a text history buffer. The initial size of history buffer
is based on the number of main window history pages, but the size can be
increased using the 'WHISTORY' mnemonic.
Example:
OPEN #1,{"New Account","TITL,HISTORY",40,10} As "Window"
o A new mnemonic, 'WHISTORY', has been defined to change the size of the
history buffer used by a window that has the "HISTORY" style (see above).
The mnemonic syntax is 'n WHISTORY' where "n" is the minimum number of
history lines to be provided by the window. The size of the history
buffer can only be increased; it can not be decreased or disabled.
o A new mnemonic, 'SENDCLIP', has been implemented to cause dL4Term or
dL4 for Windows to send any text in the Windows clipboard as current
input characters. The 'SENDCLIP' mnemonic can also be used in a function
key programming string with the 'PGMFN' mnemonic to program a key to send
the clipboard characters (note: the "Program Paste" option must be enabled
in dL4 for Windows or dL4Term).
o A new option, "Shade History", has been added to the "Preferences->Window"
dialog to cause history text to displayed using inverted colors.
o A new option, "CL/CE History", has been added to the "Preferences->Window"
dialog to cause text deleted by the 'CL' or 'CE' mnemonics to be added
the history buffer. Normally, text is only added when the window is
scrolled or the entire window is cleared.
o The 'RF' (reset function keys) mnemonic has been defined in the wyse60
and wyse60-43 terminal definition files.
o A new "AS *" syntax has been defined to make it possible to pass structure
variables with differing definitions to the same procedure. This makes
it possible for a single procedure to perform a common operation on any
structure variable. For example, the DisplayStructure() procedure below
prints the contents of any structure variable:
Declare Intrinsic Function GetStruct$
.
.
External Sub DisplayStructure(S. As *)
N = 1
Do
Try Print "Member";N;"= <";GetStruct$(S., N);">" Else Exit Do
N = N + 1
Loop
End Sub
.
.
Dim Customer. As CUSTOMERROW, Company. As COMPANYROW
.
.
Call DisplayStructure(Customer.)
Call DisplayStructure(Company.)
The "AS *" syntax can only be used in a parameter list. Within a
procedure, an "AS *" structure parameter variable can be passed to other
procedures that use "AS *" parameters or the structure can be manipulated
with the intrinsic CALLs STRUCTINFO(), GETSTRUCT(), and SETSTRUCT() or the
intrinsic function GETSTRUCT$(). An "AS *" parameter variable can also be
used in the SQLV$(), SQLN$(), SQLSN$(), SQLNV$(), or SQLSNV$() functions.
The contents of an "AS *" parameter variable cannot be accessed or changed
except by using the new intrinsic procedures. Directly assigning values
to or from an "AS *" parameter variable is illegal and may cause a runtime
error in future releases of dL4. In this release, arrays of structures
cannot be used as an "AS *" argument.
o A new intrinsic CALL, GetStruct(), has been added to allow access to
structure variable members by number. Syntax:
Call GetStruct(Value$[], [ValueIdx,] StructVar., [MbrMap.[],] MbrNo,
NumMbrs)
Where:
Value$[] A string array in which values will be returned. All
values are converted to string format. The string
elements must be large enough to contain each returned
value or an overflow error will occur.
ValueIdx Optional index in Value$[] at which to start.
StructVar. Structure variable to be queried. The variable can be
either a normal structure variable, a structure variable
parameter variable, or an "AS *" structure variable
parameter. The structure cannot contain array members.
The structure cannot contain structures as members unless
the "MbrMap" parameter is specified (see below).
MbrMap.[] Optional array of structures containing member reference
information returned by Call StructInfo() for "StructVar.".
MbrNo Member number (1 - n) to be queried. If "MbrMap." is
supplied, "MbrNo" is used as an index into "MbrMap."
to get a member reference code which is then used to
identify the actual member to be accessed.
NumMbrs Number of members to query. If "NumMbrs" exceeds the
number of members available, all of the remaining
members will be queried and "NumMbrs" will be set to
the number returned.
o A new intrinsic function, GetStruct$(), has been added to allow access to
structure variable members by number. Syntax:
GetStruct$(StructVar. [,MbrMap.[]] ,MbrNo)
Where:
StructVar. Structure variable to be queried. The variable can be
either a normal structure variable, a structure variable
parameter variable, or an "AS *" structure variable
parameter. The structure cannot contain array members.
The structure cannot contain structures as members unless
the "MbrMap." parameter is specified (see below).
MbrMap.[] Optional array of structures containing member reference
information returned by Call StructInfo() for "StructVar.".
MbrNo Member number (1 - n) to be queried. If "MbrMap." is
supplied, "MbrNo" is used as an index into "MbrMap."
to get a member reference code which is then used to
identify the actual member to be accessed.
o A new intrinsic CALL, SetStruct(), has been added to allow storing values
in structure variable members by number. Syntax:
Call SetStruct(Value$[], [ValueIdx,] StructVar., [MbrMap.[],] MbrNo,
NumMbrs)
Where :
Value$[] A string array of the values to set. A single string
value can be used instead of an array to set all of the
specified structure members to the same value.
ValueIdx Optional index in Value$[] at which to start.
StructVar. Structure variable to be changed. The variable can be
either a normal structure variable, a structure variable
parameter variable, or an "AS *" structure variable
parameter. The structure cannot contain array members.
The structure cannot contain structures as members unless
the "MbrMap." parameter is specified (see below).
MbrMap.[] Optional array of structures containing member reference
information returned by Call StructInfo() for "StructVar.".
MbrNo Member number (1 - n) to be set. If "MbrMap." is
supplied, "MbrNo" is used as an index into "MbrMap."
to get a member reference code which is then used to
identify the actual member to be changed.
NumMbrs Number of members to set. If "NumMbrs" exceeds the
number of members available, all of the remaining
members will be set and "NumMbrs" will be set to the
to the number stored.
o A new intrinsic CALL, StructInfo(), has been added to get information
about the members of a structure variable. Syntax:
Call StructInfo(Info.[], StructVar. ,MbrNo ,NumMbrs)
Where:
Info.[] An array of structures with the following members:
ItemName$ Member item name or "" if none.
RefCode? Member reference code for Call SetStruct().
ItemNum Member item number or -1 if none
ISAMOptions Member ISAM options.
Type$ Type character ("" for numeric members,
"$" for strings, "#" for dates, and "?"
for binary strings).
Format Precision of number/date members or size
of strings.
The Info. structure must match the types and order
of the members above, but the names can vary.
StructVar. Structure variable to be queried. The variable cannot
contain array members. If any members are themselves
structures, then "Info." entries will not be made for
those members but entries for each sub-member will be
created (this is similar to how such structure variables
are expanded for I/O statements such as READ RECORD).
MbrNo Member number (1 - n) to be queried.
NumMbrs Number of members to query. If "NumMbrs" exceeds the
number of members available, all of the remaining
members will be described and "NumMbrs" will be set
to the number returned.
The member information is returned in elements 1 - N of "Info.[]".
Information about the structure as a whole is returned in "Info.[0]"
and "Info.[0].Format" will contain the number of members.
o A new intrinsic function, MemberNum(), has been added to return the
member number (as used by CALL GetStruct() and such) of a member within
a structure. Syntax:
x = MemberNum(Parent., Member.)
Where:
Parent. Structure variable containing "Member."
Member. Member of the structure "Parent."
x The member number (1 - N) of "Member." in "Parent."
as used by the CALL GETSTRUCT() and CALL SETSTRUCT()
procedures. If "Member." is not a member of "Parent.",
-1 is returned.
o The SQLV$(), SQLN$(), SQLSN$(), SQLNV$(), and SQLSNV$() intrinsic
functions have been extended to support "AS *" structure parameter
variables. An "AS *" structure parameter can be used anywhere a
standard structure variable could be used as a parameter. Example:
External Sub InsertAnyStructure(Chan, S. As *)
Search #Chan;"Insert test ("+SQLN$(S.)+") Values ("+SQLV$(S.)+")"
End Sub
o The SQLV$(), SQLN$(), SQLSN$(), SQLNV$(), and SQLSNV$() intrinsic
functions have been extended to support the arrays generated by
CALL GETSTRUCT() and CALL STRUCTINFO(). Syntax:
SQLV$(Value$[], SInfo.[])
SQLN$(SInfo.[])
SQLSN$(SInfo.[])
SQLNV$(Value$[], SInfo.[])
SQLSNV$(Value$[], SInfo.[])
where "Value$[]" is a string array similar to that produced by CALL
GETSTRUCT() and "SInfo.[]" is an array of structure information similar
to that produced by CALL STRUCTINFO(). Note that "SInfo.[0].Format" must
be the number of structure members described in "SInfo.[]". The array
syntax can be used with the "AS *" feature to write procedures that
perform complex operations on any structure variable.
o A new intrinsic CALL, CopyArray(), has been added to copy ranges of
array elements from one array to another or within an array. If the copy
is performed within an array, the copy is performed such that overlapping
ranges are handled correctly.
BASIC syntax:
Call CopyArray(Dest[], DestIdx, Src[], SrcIdx, NumElements)
Where:
Dest[] is the destination array.
DestIdx is an index to the element at which to start copying to.
Src[] is the source array.
SrcIdx is an index to the element at which to start copying from.
NumElements is the number of elements to copy.
o Two new built-in functions, TIM(date_expression) and GMT(date_expression),
have been added to extract the local or GMT time of day in seconds from
a date expression.
o To increase compatibility with UniBasic, the CHAIN statement now treats a
"\177\" or "\377\" in a chain string as marking the end of the program
filename and the beginning of text to treated as typeahead. Thus the
statement
CHAIN "query\177\display
causes a short CHAIN to the program "query" and appends the text "display"
to the typeahead buffer.
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver has been extended to support YYBASEYEAR and
DDDDDBASEDATE options in the main bridge profile section to change the
default base years used by the DTOC() and DTON() translation functions.
Examples:
[FullISAMBridge]
File=filename
OpenAs=FoxPro Full-ISAM
YYBaseYear=1970
[FullISAMBridge]
File=filename
OpenAs=FoxPro Full-ISAM
DDDDDBaseDate=1968
o A new optional section, "[PostEdit]", has been added to conversion
profiles to support user defined source editing that will be applied to
each source line after the source line has been converted to dL4. This
permits the new text to use dL4 specific features such as dL4 mnemonics.
The feature is available from both the LOADSAVE "-c profile" option and
the SCOPE CONVERT command. The entries in the "[PostEdit]" section use
the same syntax as those in the "[Edit]" section.
Example:
[PostEdit]
oldmnemonics=S1
new=SUSPENDAUX
o The LOADSAVE utility, when using a conversion profile, now tries to open
include files using both the standard filename case conversion rules and
the exact case as specified in the INCLUDE statement. This enhancement
simplifies conversion of IMS programs.
o The intrinsic CALL ENV() has been extended with a mode 3 which allows
CALL ENV() to change the LUMAP, DL4LUST, and other usually static runtime
parameters of the current program. For example, the statement
Call Env(3,"LUMAP","1=C:\\userdata")
would change the LUMAP setting of the current program while a mode 2
CALL would only change LUMAP for child processes (such as those started
by a SYSTEM statement).
o Enhancement: the VERINDEX utility now supports huge files.
o Behavior change: if an ERROR statement is used to re-issue the current
error number, any supplementary error information in the current error
will be preserved.
o Behavior change: the 'BBOLD' mnemonic no longer generates an error 5
("Illegal character") if "bold" is enabled as part of the standard font
and a "bolder" font is not supported.
o Bug fixed: in 'WCBQRYBUF' mode, pasted characters were appended to the
query queue rather than the event queue.
o Bug fixed: the 'CE' mnemonic cleared the entire line containing the
cursor even if the cursor wasn't positioned at column zero.
o Bug fixed: the status line, when enabled, was sometimes scrolled above
the bottom of the window if the user scrolled text.
o Bug fixed: the delete and change commands did not work in the MAKEKEY
utility.
o Bug fixed: when assigning a structure variable to a different, but
compatible structure ("A. = B."), any member that was a numeric array was
not copied correctly and sometimes caused an error 15.
o Bug fixed: On some systems, a server name of "" or "localhost" caused an
error and did not open the local MySQL server.
o Bug fixed: an IRIS style BUILD statement for a formatted file with
protection specified ('BUILD #1,<00>filename') resulted in an endless
loop.
Feb 29, 2008 (Maintenance Release 7.2.3)
o A new intrinsic function, SQLD$(), has been added for use with SQL
drivers such as the "MySQL SQL" driver. The SQLD$() function is
identical to the SQLV$() function except that it tells the SQL driver
to format all date/time values as date only values. This is necessary
to perform searches on date (not date/time) columns. In particular,
queries to version 5.0.42 or later of the MySQL server will NOT match
date/time values with date columns if SQLV$() is used instead of SQLD$().
o Enhancement: the MySQL Full-ISAM driver has been modified to increase
compatibility with release 5.0.42 or later of the MySQL server.
o Bug fixed: On some systems, a server name of "" or "localhost" caused an
error and did not open the local MySQL server.
o Bug fixed: CHAIN statements with both starting and return line number
arguments ('CHAIN "pgm",10,R') could not be entered and caused syntax
errors.
o Bug fixed: when "PM" or "pm" format codes were used, the DateUsing$()
function produced noon and midnight as "00" rather than "12".
o Bug fixed: an arithmetic exception occurred when inserting records
with the Full-ISAM Bridge driver using a profile that had an empty
character set specified in a key part. A default character set of
"0123456789" will now be used whenever the character set is empty.
o Beta bug fixed: the Oracle SQL driver "CHF(channel)" function returned a
value of -1 instead of 0 for empty result sets.
o Beta bug fixed: the Oracle SQL driver did not properly translate an Oracle
row locked error code into the dL4 record lock error code.
o Beta bug fixed: if a conditional breakpoint ("break for x>4") was made
false by a debugger LET command, the breakpoint was not reenabled until
at least one statement had been executed. Conditional breakpoints are
only reported when the specified condition changes from false to true.
o Beta bug fixed: breakpoints weren't always preserved when re-running a
program.
Feb 8, 2008 (Maintenance Release 7.2.2)
o Bug fixed: an IRIS style BUILD statement for a formatted file with
protection specified ('BUILD #1,<00>filename') resulted in an endless
loop.
Feb 7, 2008 (Maintenance Release 7.2.1)
o Bug fixed: the printer driver "CRToCRLF" option did not work when the
printer was in binary mode. Note that any current applications that
used the "CRToCRLF" option and worked correctly will probably need the
option turned off. This is also true for any use of the auxiliary
printer in binary mode ("Binary=True,CRToCRLF=True").
Jan 25, 2008 (Release 7.2)
o The MySQL SQL driver now supports stored procedures and multi-statement
queries. If a stored procedure or multi-statement query returns more
than one result set, a "SEARCH > #c;" statement can be used to move to
the next result set. An error 52 is generated by "SEARCH > #c;" if
there are no more result sets to be read. Example:
SEARCH #1;"select * from table1; select * from table2"
READ RECORD #1;Result1.
.
.
SEARCH > #1;
READ RECORD #1;Result2.
.
.
As before, the CHF(channel) function returns the number of rows in the
current result set.
o The "AND" and "OR" operators have been extended to support date values.
Any valid date value is considered to be "TRUE" and any invalid date
value is treated as "FALSE". Example:
If Flag And StartDate# Call ProcessItem()
o The POS() function can now be used to search single dimensioned arrays of
any type including arrays of structures. When used to search arrays, the
POS() function has the same syntax as when searching a string except that
the source variable must be an array variable followed by "[]" and the "IS"
and "EXCEPT" relations are not supported. For example, the
statement:
I = POS(A[], =5)
would search the numeric array "A" starting at index 0 for an element with
a value of 5. If such an element is found, the POS() function returns the
index of the element. If no matching element is found, a value of -1 is
returned (this differs from the non-array search using POS() which returns
0 for unsuccessful searches). By default, the POS() function searches the
entire array, but an optional fifth numeric parameter can be used to
specify the number of elements in the array. The search in the prior
example could be limited to the first three array elements by using:
I = POS(A[], =5, 1, 1, 3)
If the limit is set to zero, the POS() function will return a result of
-1 (search unsuccessful)
For consistency, the POS() function when used to search non-array string
variables has been extended to also support the optional fifth parameter.
If the parameter is set to zero, the string POS() function will return 0
(search unsuccessful).
When searching an array of structures, the search is performed on the
first member of the structure. In the following example, the POS()
function is used to search an array of structures where the first member
is a string:
Def Struct NAMETOCODE
Member Name$[20]
Member 3%,Code
End Def
Dim NameTable.[2] As NAMETOCODE, N$[20]
Read NameTable.[]
Data "FRED", 123, "LUCY", 415, "JOHN", 723
Input "Name? "N$ \ Print
I = Pos(NameTable.[], =Ucase$(N$))
If I < 0
Print "Name not found."
Else
Print "Code equals";NameTable.[I].Code
End If
End
o The READ and MAT READ statements can now be used to initialize date and
binary variables from DATA statements. The values in the DATA statements
must be quoted strings. A date value in a DATA statement can be any
standard date string such as "Jan 5, 2007" or "2007/10/01". A binary
value in a DATA statement must be an even number of hexadecimal digits.
Example:
Dim B?[5]
Read D#,B?
Data "Jan 5, 2007","2BAD"
If a binary value in a DATA statement is shorter than the variable being
read into, the trailing bytes of the binary variable will not be changed.
If a binary value in a DATA statement is longer than the variable being
read into, an error 70 will be reported.
o The dl4login terminal service utility now supports a "-s" command line
option to run user processes using the service account rather than the
user account. This makes it possible to use dl4login without giving
users local logon privileges on the server. When using this option,
a special non-privileged account should be created and used with the
dl4login service so that user processes will not be executed in a
privileged service account. In this release, the "-s" option can be
enabled only by modifying the dl4login service login options and also
changing the dl4login service registry values.
o Enhancement: CALL DXLOAD() and other dynamicXport CALLs that use file
paths as arguments can now accept paths that contain spaces.
o Enhancement: the CHDIR statement is now accepted when converting IMS
programs.
o Behavior change: OPTION STRING SUBSCRIPTS IRIS, which controls how zero
subscripts are handled with strings, now also controls how zero subscripts
are handled when used with non-array numeric variables. If the option is
set, a zero subscript will be ignored and will not cause an error 28.
o Behavior change: when using short timeouts with FoxPro Full-ISAM files, a
timeout is only reported if the record is locked or if the index is locked
for more than one second. In previous releases, a spurious record lock
timeout sometimes occurred when a zero length timeout was used and a
transient index lock was detected.
o Behavior change: a printer selection dialog is displayed even by console
processes if the desktop is visible. Previously, the default printer was
always used if a printer selection dialog was invoked.
o Behavior change: copying and pasting a word includes only one trailing
space.
o Bug fixed: FoxPro Full-ISAM files could not be opened if the file path
contained spaces.
o Bug fixed: On some systems, a server name of "" or "localhost" caused an
error and did not open the local MySQL server.
o Bug fixed: copy and paste of text from a window was corrupted if an
output region was scrolled when the region was smaller than the canvas.
o Bug fixed: a memory violation occurred if an OPEN statement failed when
using the MySQL SQL driver.
Aug 27, 2007 (Maintenance Release 7.1.1)
o Bug fixed: an error was reported the first time a partially encrypted
file was opened if the encryption key was not defined.
Aug 17, 2007 (Release 7.1)
o Data in Indexed Contiguous or Contiguous files can be now be encrypted
on the Windows (1B), Linux (6D), Apple Mac OS X (A1 and A4), SCO
OpenServer 5 (99), and SCO OpenServer 6 / UnixWare 7 (55) platforms.
Additional platforms will be supported in the future.
Either entire records or parts of records can be encrypted. In this
release, encryption is not supported for keys in indexes. Data can be
encrypted using the AES, "Triple DES", or DES algorithms. To use
encrypted files, the dL4 encryption option must be enabled in the SSN.
A file is encrypted by creating the file with an "N" attribute. For
example, the following BUILD statement creates an encrypted file with
fully encrypted records using a key named "CustData":
BUILD #1," [1:40] filename"
The key "CustData" is NOT the actual passphrase used to encrypt the data.
Instead, "CustData" is the logical name of an encryption key that has
been previously defined using a SYSTEM 100 statement or loaded from a key
file. A key name is case insensitive and can include any character except
for a double or single quotation mark. The quotation marks in the
filename string surrounding the key name are mandatory. Records in
encrypted files cannot span record boundaries.
An OPEN, ROPEN, or EOPEN statement does not use any special syntax to
open encrypted files. When a previously encrypted file is opened, dL4
uses the currently defined keys to open the file. If none of the current
keys matches the one required by the file, an error 284 is generated. If
a current key matches the key name needed to open a file, but the
encryption parameters of the key do not match those used to create the
file, an error 284) will be generated.
A file can be encrypted with partially encrypted records by specifying
1 to 16 encrypted segments as part of the "N" attribute. The segment
definitions must be placed before the key name using the format "S-E"
where "S" is the zero based starting offset of the segment and "E" is
the zero based ending offset of the segment. The example below creates
a file in which the first 10 characters and last 6 characters of each
record are encrypted:
BUILD #1," [1:40] filename"
Partially encrypted records are used to decrease encryption overhead or
to allow programs to read the non-encrypted sections of a record without a
key. To permit reading non-encrypted sections, each encryption segment
definition must be followed by a fill code. Three case-insensitive fill
codes are supported:
"Z" Binary zero fill the segment
"S" Space fill the segment
"*" Asterisk fill the segment
The previous example could binary zero fill the first segment and space
fill the second segment using the following format:
BUILD #1," [1:40] filename"
If the file was then opened without a matching key, read-only access would
be permitted. Whenever data was read from a record, it would appear that
characters 0 through 9 contained binary zeroes and characters 74 through
79 contained spaces.
Each dL4 session maintains a list of keys to be used in creating or
opening encrypted files. The list is initially loaded with the keys from
the optional key file and can be modified during the session by executing
SYSTEM 100 statements. The list persists throughout the dL4 session
until dL4 exits even when different programs are loaded. The key list
is NOT passed to separate sessions started via SPAWN, PORT, or CALL TRXCO
statements.
The SYSTEM 100 statement, described in a section below, is used to add,
modify, or delete keys in the current key list. If the DL4KEYFILE
environment variable is defined when dL4 starts, the string will be used
as the key file path for the session. Key files are text files
containing one or more key definitions. The key file begins with a
readable label line which is followed by a list of key values. The key
values are not readable and are encrypted with a user defined passphrase
or the standard dL4 default passphrase. If a user defined passphrase is
used, a SYSTEM 100 statement must define the key "SYS_KEYFILE" using the
chosen passphrase and cipher before opening or creating any encrypted
files. Key files can only be used on the system on which the key file was
created (or one with a matching license number). A master key list should
always be maintained in an encrypted contiguous or indexed contiguous file
using an application defined key. Key files are created using the MAKEKEY
utility or by using the SYSTEM statement.
o The SYSTEM statement has been extended with two new modes to support
encrypted files. The SYSTEM 100 statement is used to add new keys to the
current key list, modify existing keys, or to delete the key list. The
following SYSTEM format is used to add a new key or to replace an existing
key of the same name:
SYSTEM 100,"keyname","passphrase","cipher"
where
"keyname" is a string expression that specifies the key name
"passphrase" is a string expression that specifies the passphrase
"cipher" is the name of encryption algorithm.
A key name can be any sequence of ASCII characters. Key names beginning
with "SYS_" are reserved for special purposes and should not be used for
application keys. A passphrase can be any sequence of ASCII characters
and must be at least six characters long. The supported cipher names are
"AES-256" (256 bit AES), "AES-128" (128 bit AES), "3DES" (triple DES),
and "DES". Cipher names are case-insensitive. The recommend ciphers are
"AES-256" and "AES-128" where "AES-128" offers somewhat weaker protection
but higher performance when compared to "AES-256".
Keys can be deleted from the current key list by using a SYSTEM 100
statement with the name of the key and empty strings for the passphrase
and cipher. Example:
SYSTEM 100,"keyname","",""
The entire current key list can be deleted by using "" as the key name
to be deleted:
SYSTEM 100,"","",""
The SYSTEM 101 statement is used to generate a key file string image
that contains all of the keys from the current key list (except those
that begin with "SYS_"). The SYSTEM 101 statement has the format
SYSTEM 101,S$
where "S$" is any string variable. Before executing the SYSTEM 101
statement, "S$" must be initialized with the label string to be used
by the key file. When the SYSTEM 101 statement completes executing,
"S$" will contain the key file string image (without the key file
label string).
A key file is created by writing the key file string image to a text file
preceded by a label line. The key file string image can written as a
single line or as many lines as desired (except for the label line, end
of line characters are ignored when dL4 reads a key file). Before
using a SYSTEM 101 statement, the current key list must be deleted and
then filled using SYSTEM 100 statements. The following example creates
a user specific key file with two keys:
DIM I$[32000]
SYSTEM 100,"","",""
SYSTEM 100,"CustData","abcdefghijkl","AES-128"
SYSTEM 100,"Private","gibberish","AES-256"
I$ = "Our keys"
SYSTEM 100,"SYS_KEYFILE","userpassphrase","AES-256"
SYSTEM 101,I$
BUILD #1,+"userkeyfile"
PRINT #1;"Our keys"
PRINT #1;I$
CLOSE #1
To use this key file, the application would have to define the key
"SYS_KEYFILE" before the first open or creation of an encrypted file.
All key files are usable only on a system using the same license number
as that used when the key files was created. Key files must be 32767
characters or less in length. The key file will be invalidated if any
printable characters, including those in the label line, are changed.
o The SYSTEM statement has been extended with a new mode 102 that restores
the original encryption key list from the file specified in the DL4KEYFILE
environment variable. Example:
System 100,"","","" ! Delete all encryption keys
. ! Open files without encryption keys
.
System 102 ! Restore encryption keys from the key file
o Beta behavior change: files with fully encrypted records are not required
to have a record length of 64 bytes or more.
o A new command line utility, MAKEKEY, has been added to the tools
directory. The utility is used to create and maintain both master and
user key files. A master key file is an encrypted Contiguous file that
contains a list of encryption key definitions. The user must supply a
passphrase every time a master key file is loaded or saved. A master
file can be moved between systems, but it cannot be used directly by
SCOPE or RUN as a key file. A master key file can be loaded by MAKEKEY
and then written to a user key file that can be used by SCOPE or RUN via
the DL4KEYFILE environment variable. A user key file is bound to a
specific system by the Passport license number and uses either a standard
dL4 encryption key or a user/application specified passphrase. For high
security, user key files should always use a user/application specified
passphrase.
o Four new error numbers have been defined for use with the new encryption
feature:
283 File is encrypted
284 Unrecognized encryption key
285 Unsupported encryption method
286 Inaccessible or corrupt key file
o CALL FileInfo() has been extended to return the encryption status of
files. If a file is encrypted, an "N" attribute will be set in the
attribute characters of the returned filename. Encrypted record segment
definitions are returned in an optional numeric array parameter. If used,
the array parameter must be DIMmed as "a[128,2]" with the following usage:
a[X,0] segment fill type
a[X,1] segment item number
a[X,0] segment length in bytes
where "X" is the segment number. The end of the array is marked by a
segment definition with a length of zero. The segment fill type has
the following meaning:
0 Segment cannot be read without a valid encryption key
1 Segment is zeroed if read without a key ("Z")
2 Segment is space filled if read without a key ("S")
2 Segment is asterisk filled if read without a key ("*")
Example:
CALL FileInfo(D$,A,B$,M,I,E) ! array E receives segment defs
o A new GET operation, -495, has been defined to return the encryption
status of the file open on the channel. The statement will return 1 into
the numeric parameter is the file is encrypted and zero if the file is not
encrypted. Example:
ROpen #1,"filename"
GET #1,-495;X
If X Print "File is encrypted."
o A new GET operation, -494, has been defined to return the encryption
segment definitions of an encrypted Contiguous or Indexed-Contiguous
file. The statement
GET #1,-494,SegNo;Options,SegStart,SegSize
will return, for segment "SegNo", the segment options in "Options", the
zero based starting byte offset of the segment in the record in
"SegStart", and the size of the segment in bytes in "SegSize". The
segment option values are identical to those returned by CALL FileInfo().
o The QUERY utility has been extended to print the encryption status of
files. If only selected record segments have been encrypted, the segment
definitions are displayed.
o Two new intrinsic functions, SQLSN$() and SQLSNV$(), have been added for
use with SQL drivers such as the "MySQL SQL" driver. The new functions
are identical to existing SQLN$() and SQLNV$() functions except that
when using nested structure definitions, the new functions will
concatenate the field names of the parent structure member with the
child member field names. For example, given the following definitions:
Def Struct POSITION
Member 1%,X : Item "Column"
Member 1%,Y : Item "Row"
End Def
Def Struct RECTANGLE
Member UpperLeft. As POSITION : Item "UL"
Member LowerRight. As POSITION : Item "LR"
End Def
Dim R. As RECTANGLE
then the SQLSN$() and SQLSNV$() functions would generate the field names
"ULColumn", "ULRow", "LRColumn", and "LRRow". The SQLN$() and SQLNV$()
function would generate the names "Column", "Row", "Column", and "Row"
causing duplicate field name errors in some situations. The new
functions are actually bug fixes for the old functions which could not
be changed because some existing applications depend on their current
behavior. Note that the new functions will produce the same results as
the old functions if the parent members do not have field names.
o Behavior change: the MAP RECORD, DEFINE RECORD, and DEFINE INDEX
statements no longer require parent members to have field names when
structure definitions are nested. Example:
Def Struct POSITION
Member 1%,X : Item "Column"
Member 1%,Y : Item "Row"
End Def
Def Struct RECTANGLE
Member Start. As POSITION
Member Label$[20]: Item "Label"
End Def
o Four new sample libraries have been added to the tools directory. The
dl4util.lib library contains various useful procedures such as Center$()
which centers text in a string. The gui1.lib, gui2.lib, and gui3.lib
libraries provide procedures to aid GUI programming with dL4Term or
dL4 for Windows.
o A new runtime parameter, "DL4LOCALE", has been defined to simplify
configuration of localized or application specific date formats. The
"datemask" option in DL4LOCALE sets a DATEUSING$() compatible format
mask for use in date conversions when using the native (local) date
format. For example, if DL4LOCALE is set to
datemask=YYYYMMDD
then the following program would print the current date in the format
"YYYYMMDD":
Option Date Format Native
Dim D$[40]
D$ = Tim#(0)
Print D$
If DL4LOCALE is set to "datemask=YYYYMMDD", then "YYYYMMDD" will be
accepted as a valid format when converting strings to dates if the
native date format is enabled ('D# = "20031003"').
o A new open option, "STRING=" has been added to the MySQL SQL driver.
With the STRING option enabled, numeric and date column values can be read
into string variables. The STRING option can be enabled by setting it
to "TRUE", "T", or "YYYYMMDD". Setting the STRING option to "YYYYMMDD"
is equivalent to setting the option to "True" and also causes date values
to be formatted as "YYYYMMDD" when date values are read into string
variables. Both the new STRING option and the previously supported
RTRIM option can be specified in the DL4MYSQL runtime parameter.
Examples:
Open #1,"(string=YYYYMMDD)accountingdb" as "MySQL SQL"
DL4MYSQL=server=theservername,string=YYYYMMDD
export DL4MYSQL
Note: when inserting or updating date values in rows, date values must
be correctly formatted as "YYYY-MM-DD" or "YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS" even if
the "YYYYMMDD" option is enabled.
o The SYSTEM statement has been extended with mode 34 which enables
converting terminal input characters to uppercase and mode 35 which
disables such conversion. Example:
System 34
Input "All characters converted to uppercase: "I$
Print
System 35
Input "Normal input: "I$
Print
Characters are not converted to uppercase if binary input mode is
enabled.
o Two new mnemonics have been implemented to enable and disable converting
terminal input characters to uppercase. The 'BUCASE' mnemonic enables
uppercase conversion mode and the 'EUCASE' mnemonic disables the
conversion.
o A new intrinsic function, IsAdL4Keyword(), has been added to determine
whether the argument string is a dL4 reserved word. The function returns
1 if the string is a reserved word and zero if the string is not a
reserved word.
o The following intrinsic calls have been added for UniBasic compatibility:
UniBasic CALL New equivalent dL4 Intrinsic
CALL 10 Call TrimmedLen()
CALL 11 Call StrSrch11()
CALL 68 Call BuildKey()
CALL 105 Call MiscStr105()
CALL 113 Call NameStack()
CALL 115 Call UnpkRecord()
CALL 119 Call FindLeast()
CALL 120 Call ConvertSPC2Date()
CALL 121 Call CheckSPC2Date()
CALL 122 Call DiffSPC2Dates()
o A new intrinsic CALL, UBCKSUM(), has been added to provide fully
compatible UniBasic style checksums. The existing CALL CKSUM() does
not calculate UniBasic checksums correctly on some platforms, but CALL
CKSUM() has not been changed because some applications may depend on the
existing behavior. The conversion profiles tools/convert.prf and
tools/convbits.prf now use CALL UBCKSUM() when converting UniBasic
programs that use CALL $CKSUM. A new mode 3 has been added to both CALL
UBCKSUM() and CALL CKSUM() to correctly calculate UniBasic checksums.
o A "-n" option has been added to the SCOPE CHECK command to change the
capitalization of symbols in a program to a standard format. The command
"check -n" will change all variable names, procedure names, and line
labels to mixed case. All structure definition names will be changed to
all upper case. When changing a name to mixed case, the existing name is
not modified if it is already in mixed case. If the name is all lower
case or all upper case, the name will be changed so that the first
character is in upper case and all other characters are in lower case.
Up to four custom capitalization rules can be specified after the "n"
option letter. Each rule is a pair of characters where the first
character is the symbol class and the second character controls how
the symbols will be capitalized. The symbol classes are:
"v" variables
"s" structure definitions
"p" procedures or functions
"l" line labels
The capitalization rule characters are:
"m" change symbols to mixed case
"l" change symbols to all lower case
"u" change symbols to all upper case
"*" leave symbols unchanged
If a custom rule is not specified for a symbol class, then the default
rule will be used.
Example:
check -nvllu
The command will convert variable names to all lower case, line labels
to all upper case, and use the default rules for procedures, functions,
and structure definitions.
o To increase compatibility with UniBasic, a new terminal definition file
setting, "MAXMOVETO", has been implemented to control handling of cursor
addressing sequences that use coordinates greater than the actual number
of columns or rows in a window. If the line "MaxMoveTo=True" is in the
"[Settings]" section of the current terminal definition file, then any
attempt to address beyond the actual range will instead move the cursor
to the maximum column or row. The MAXMOVETO mode only changes cursor
addressing behavior in windows. The MAXMOVETO mode works with standard
terminal types and with dL4Term version 6.3.3 or later.
o Enhancement: the maximum character constant size has been increased from
255 characters to 2000.
o Enhancement: the maximum command and source line length has been
increased to 2040 characters.
o Enhancement: mouse wheels can now be used to change the window scrolling
position.
o Behavior change: if an OPEN of a contiguous or indexed contiguous file uses
a "CHARSET=name" option and "name" matches the character set used by the
file, no error will be reported. If the character set name does not match
that used by the file, a file syntax error will be reported.
o Behavior change: the FoxPro Full-ISAM driver now retries index locks for
a short period even if a timeout value of zero is used. This change
reduces the chance of getting a misleading "record locked" error when
using small timeout values.
o Behavior change: the FoxPro Full-ISAM driver now accepts record -2 in
addition to 0 and -1 in an unlock record operation.
o The TESTLOCK utility is now supplied as part of dL4 for Windows.
o Bug fixed: the MySQL SQL and MySQL Full-ISAM drivers did not properly
concatenate field names when nested structure definitions were used.
Instead of concatenating the field names, the drivers duplicated the
parent field name. Note: in dL4 7.1, parent members in structures are
no longer required to have field names.
o Bug fixed: the LOAD command displayed an "Illegal Driver Operation" error
message instead of "Duplicate Line Label" when a duplicate line label was
found.
o Beta bug fixed: a parameter error was reported on any attempt to use
the SYSTEM 100 statement to delete a specific encryption key.
o Bug fixed: quoted file paths did not work in CALL DXLOAD(), CALL DXSAVE(),
or other dynamicXport CALLs.
May 24 2007 (Maintenance Release 6.2.11)
o Behavior change: a "CHARSET=..." option in an OPEN statement no
longer reports a file syntax error if an indexed contiguous or
contiguous file is being opened and the specified character set
matches that of the file.
o Bug fixed: copy selections that included text outside the currently
displayed window only copied the visible text.
o Bug fixed: a memory violation occurred under unusual conditions while
using GUI elements.
Apr 27 2007 (Maintenance Release 6.2.10)
o Enhancement: the instlogn.bat script used to install the optional
dl4login terminal service now supports paths that contain spaces. Such
paths must be placed in quotation marks on the command line.
o Enhancement: the dl4servr utility now has a "/c string" option to add
command line arguments to the command executed by the service.
o Behavior change: the Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver now supports
SQL Server 2005. This change is compatible with SQL Server 2000, but may
cause problems with older versions of SQL Server.
o Support local application drivers in the development kit.
Feb 20 2007 (Maintenance Release 6.2.9)
o Behavior change: dl4login now sets the DL4HANGUPEXIT environment variable
to 1 unless the value is explicitly set in the user profile.
o Bug fixed: if a user connected via dl4login exited dL4Term without
logging out first, the dL4 session did not exit even if the
DL4HANGUPEXIT environment variable was set to a non-zero value.
o Bug fixed: demo SSNs that expired on July 1, 2007 or October 1, 2007 were
treated as if they had already expired if they were used prior to July 1,
2007. Passport version 2.8.1 or later must be installed to correct this
problem.
o Bug fixed: CALL DXMERGE() reported random errors, most commonly with
large values.
Dec 19 2006 (Maintenance Release 6.2.8)
o Behavior change: the CHF(12xx) and CHF(13xx) functions (current column
and current row) can now be used when the "Page Printer" driver is
opened indirectly via a printer script. Previously, the functions could
be used only when the driver was opened directly by name.
o Bug fixed: the original default button status, when defined, was not
restored when focus was moved to a non-button GUI element.
o Bug fixed: after an Indexed Contiguous file was opened with EOPEN, some
index update sequences reported index corruption errors.
o Bug fixed: the SCOPE LOAD command displayed an "Illegal Driver Operation"
error message instead of the correct error message when a duplicate line
label was detected.
o Bug fixed: attempting to load and run a PSAVEd program without the proper
OSN did not display the correct error.
Sep 14 2006 (Maintenance Release 6.2.7)
o Two new mnemonics have been implemented for use in GUI programs. The
'BQ' mnemonic enables a special query mode which disables echo and the
cursor. The 'EQ' mnemonic disables the special query mode. Using 'BQ'
instead of 'IOEE K0' can improve query performance on some
systems.
o A new open option, "RECEIPT=address", has been added to the email driver
to request that the receiver send a receipt when the email has been
displayed. Example:
Opts$ = "(From=someone,Receipt=someone,Subject=''(test)'')"
Open #1,Opts$ + "somebody" As "Email"
.
.
o Behavior change: the default value of ISAMFILES has been increased from
50 to 100.
o Behavior change: non-ASCII punctuation characters such as true hyphens or
opening/closing quotation marks are now converted to ASCII dashes or
quotation marks when performing a 'WCQUERY'. The non-ASCII characters,
usually generated by cut-and-paste operations from other applications,
caused illegal characters errors when written to files and were not
recognized by most dL4 programs.
o Bug fixed: FoxPro Full-ISAM files with keys using %4 or %5 numeric values
did not sort correctly sometimes because the least significant digits were
ignored.
o Bug fixed: an address violation occurred if an entire independent window
was selected with the mouse/pointer and then copied. Pasting an empty
copy buffer sometimes produced an unpredictable character.
o Bug fixed: all lines returned by querying a WCMEMO box had a space
appended.
o Bug fixed: when using character terminals with wide and narrow screen
widths, windows sometimes scrolled when characters were printed on the
bottom right corner.
o Bug fixed: the dl4servr.exe utility could not be used on Windows NT
systems.
o Bug fixed: CALL EDITFIELD() generated an error if the DIMed length of the
source string was greater than that of the destination string. The error
should have occurred only when the current length of the source exceeded
the size of the destination.
May 26 2006 (Maintenance Release 6.2.6)
o A new open option, "ATTACHAS=USERTYPE" has been added to the email driver
to send email attachments with a user specified content type. A user
specified type can help an email client select the proper application to
open an attached file. The following example sends a file that should
be opened with Microsoft Excel:
Opts$ = "(From=someone,Subject=''(test)'',AttachAs=usertype)"
Open #1,Opts$ + "somebody" As "Email"
Print #1;"Please review the attached spreadsheet."
Add #1;"table.dta","vnd.ms-excel"
Close #1
For some email clients, it may be necessary to also specify a defined
file extension (such as ".xls" for Excel) to guarantee that the file
will be opened with the proper application.
When using "ATTACHAS=USERTYPE", the ADD statement can only attach one
file at a time and supports three optional arguments. Syntax:
ADD #channel;FilePath$ {,ContentType$ {,Encoding$ {,SaveName$ }}}
where:
"FilePath$" is the path of the file to be attached.
"ContentType$" is a MIME content type such as "octet-stream" or
"vnd.ms-excel".
"Encoding$" is the encoding type which must be "" or "Base64".
"SaveName$" is a default file name to which the user can save
the attachment.
The "FilePath$" value is the only required argument, but the arguments
must be given in the listed order. An argument may be specified as ""
if it is needed only as a space holder.
o A new open option, "ATTACHAS=INLINEMIME" has been added to the email driver
to send email attachments that are dynamically generated with PRINT
statements to the email driver. The following example sends data that
should be opened with Microsoft Excel:
Opts$ = "(From=someone,Subject=''(test)'',AttachAs=inlinemime)"
Open #1,Opts$ + "somebody" As "Email"
Print #1;"Please review the attached spreadsheet."
Add #1;"","vnd.ms-excel"
Print #1;""
Print #1;""
Print #1;""
Print #1;""
Print #1;" Item | "
Print #1;" Unit Price | "
Print #1;" Quantity | "
Print #1;" Cost | "
Print #1;"
"
Print #1;""
Print #1;" Widget | "
Print #1;" 25.00 | "
Print #1;" 5 | "
Print #1;" =b2*c2 | "
Print #1;"
"
Print #1;"
"
Print #1;""
Print #1;""
Close #1
When using "ATTACHAS=INLINEMIME", the ADD statement supports four optional
arguments. Syntax:
ADD #channel;{FilePath$ {,ContentType$ {,Encoding$ {,SaveName$ }}}}
where:
"FilePath$" is the path of the file to be attached. To print the
attachment data to the email driver channel, this value must be "".
"ContentType$" is a MIME content type such as "octet-stream" or
"vnd.ms-excel".
"Encoding$" is the encoding type which must be "" or a valid MIME
encoding type. If the encoding type is "", it will be treated as
"7bit" text.
"SaveName$" is a default file name to which the user can save
the attachment.
The arguments must be given in the listed order. An argument may be
specified as "" if it is needed only as a space holder.
o Behavior change: horizontal tab characters printed in a window now scroll
to the next line if the end of line is reached and scrolling is enabled.
In previous versions, the cursor position would wrap to the top of the
window.
o A new option, "Block Cursor" has been added to the "Preferences->Window"
dialog to force the cursor to be displayed as a block rather than as an
underline. This option does not change the cursor appearance in GUI
elements.
o A new option, "Alt Bell", has been added to the "Preferences->Window"
dialog to select an alternate sound for the "bell".
o The intrinsic CALL PROGRAMDUMP() now supports an "extra" option to
print additional internal information that may be needed by Dynamic
Concepts support personnel. Currently, the "extra" information consists
of internal channels and recent operating system error codes. The
information printed by "extra" may vary in future releases.
o Bug fixed: the default button did not change when a user tabbed to a
non-default push button.
o Bug fixed: users could not tab out of a WCMEMO or WCTEXT box.
o Bug fixed: INPUT timeout signals were not always received if the RECV
or SIGNAL 2 statement immediately followed the INPUT statement.
May 4 2006 (Maintenance Release 6.2.5)
o Bug fixed: a memory violation could occur when changing the colors
used by a GUI element.
Apr 18 2006 (Maintenance Release 6.2.4)
o Installation of dL4 on 64-bit Windows is now supported. Previous versions
of dL4 ran on 64-bit Windows, but had to be installed manually.
o The "Copy and Paste Word" edit menu item has been moved down in the
menu to reduce accidental use.
Mar 31 2006 (Maintenance Release 6.2.3)
o A new mnemonic, 'SETTINGS', has been implemented in the Windows printer
driver to override the printer page information supplied by Windows. The
mnemonic sequence 'wmm,hmm SETTINGS' will set the usable page size to
'wmm' millimeters wide and 'hmm' millimeters high. The mnemonic sequence
'xpi,ypi,poffx,poffy,wp,hp,wmm,hmm SETTINGS' will set the following
values:
xpi - pixels per horizontal inch
ypi - pixels per vertical inch
poffx - left offset in pixels
poffy - top offset in pixels
wp - width in pixels
hp - height in pixels
wmm - width in millimeters
hmm - height in millimeters
These values are defined to match the native Windows values. This
mnemonic should not be needed in normal printer use, but it can be
used if the printer driver pages incorrectly.
The 'SETTINGS' mnemonic can also be used with a single string parameter
"test" to print 150 diagnostic lines which display various printer
characteristics.
o A tuning option has been implemented to redefine a "left mouse click" to
immediately send the word underneath the pointer as input along with a
carriage return or just a carriage return if a blank area has been
selected. This option is enabled by adding 12288 (hexadecimal 1800)
to the optional registry DWORD value
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\TuningOptions
or
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\TuningOptions
If this option is enabled, the standard left click actions to select
text will be disabled.
o A new option, "Copy and Paste Word", has been added to the "right click"
floating edit menu. If selected, the current word underneath the
pointer will be copied and pasted.
o The DL4DRIVERS runtime parameter has been extended to accept a "huge"
option to cause Indexed-Contiguous, Contiguous, and Formatted files to
be created as "huge" files by default. The "huge" option can be
combined with the "universal" option to create "huge universal" files
by default.
o The "Directory" and "Sorted Directory" drivers now support the CHF$()
and CHF#() functions.
o The "Sorted Directory" driver now supports a "caseinsensitive" or
"nocase" boolean option to enable case insensitive sorting of directory
entries.
o The sort option in the tools/libr utility now ignore case when sorting
directory entries.
o Any value changes in a WCSTRING, WCNUMBER, or WCPRIVATE edit box can now
be tracked by using the 'WCACTION' mnemonic to set the value tracking
action string as action number 3. Example:
PRINT PCHR$(10,3,'F40');'WCACTION'; ! Set action 3 for element 10
Once action 3 has been defined, any change in the edit box value will
be immediately reported by sending the action string ('F40' in the
example) followed by the new value. For example, if the edit box had
the value "AB" and the user added a "C", then the program would receive
the string 'F40' + "ABC" as input. Tracking can be disabled by setting
the action string to "".
o A new mnemonic, 'AUTOCOMPLETE', has been implemented for use with
WCSTRING or WCNUMBER edit boxes. The mnemonic has two parameters:
the GUI element number and the autocompletion string. When processed,
the 'AUTOCOMPLETE' mnemonic compares the current value of the edit box
to the autocompletion string. If the current value matches (ignoring
case) the leading characters of the autocompletion string, the edit box
value will be replaced by the autocompletion string leaving the caret
position unchanged.
The 'AUTOCOMPLETE' mnemonic is intended to be used with edit box value
tracking (see WCACTION 3 above). A typical application would enable
value tracking and then, each time a new tracking value was received,
the application would send an 'AUTOCOMPLETE' mnemonic with a suggested
value.
Example:
PRINT PCHR$(10,"Wilson");'AUTOCOMPLETE';
o Bug fixed: the makeuniv utility reported a "Channel in-use: 1" error if
a file specified for conversion had already been converted.
o Bug fixed: the DTOC option in a Full-ISAM Bridge profile did not
correctly report some types of illegal date values.
o Bug fixed: the tools/query utility could not be used on a C-Tree index
file.
Jan 12 2006 (Maintenance Release 6.2.2)
o Bug fixed: the backspace key didn't work in WCNUMBER edit boxes.
Dec 27 2005 (Maintenance Release 6.2.1)
o The "MySQL SQL" driver now supports MySQL 5.x servers.
o Behavior change: an empty menu bar is displayed if the menu bar is enabled
even if all of the standard menu items are disabled. This avoids some
visual problems if an application uses and updates the menu bar.
o Bug fixed: menu bars were displayed on all windows if the menu bar was
enabled on the main window.
o Bug fixed: structure assignments ("A. = B.") did not copy string members
into the destination structure if an expression error occurred in a
previous concatenating string assignment ('S$ = "ab","c",X$[5/0],"def"').
Dec 8 2005 (Release 6.2)
o dL4 for Windows now includes an optional telnet-like service which makes
it possible to run dL4 applications on a Windows server from thin clients
that run dL4Term. The server must use Windows 2000, Windows XP, or
Windows 2003. To install the service, run the script instlogn.bat in the
"/Program Files/dL4" directory (or wherever dL4 was installed) from a
command prompt as shown below:
cd \Program Files\dL4
instlogn.bat
where
is the IP address of the server
is the TCP port number to be used
is the Windows domain defining the user accounts
is the full path of the user profile directory
For example,
instlogn.bat 192.168.0.5 23 win2ksys c:\dL4Profiles
For systems that do not use Windows domains, the domain name is the
name of the server. Systems that have software firewalls may require
reconfiguration of the firewall to accept connections to the selected
port number.
Each user of the dl4login service must have an account with local logon
privileges on the Windows server. For each user, a text file must also
exist in the profile directory with the name "u_name" or "u_name.txt"
where "name" is the Windows user id. This file defines user specific
environment variable values. Each line of the file must be either a set
command, an include command, or a comment line as shown below:
set =
include
; comment text
An include file is a text file containing SET, INCLUDE, or comment lines.
Each user profile must define the values HOMEPATH and COMMAND via SET
commands or INCLUDE files. The HOMEPATH value defines the initial current
directory when a user logs onto the system. The COMMAND value defines the
program which will be executed when the user logs in. The following is a
typical user profile:
set HOMEPATH=C:\Users\username
set TERMDIR="C:\Program Files\dL4\Term"
set TERM=dl4term
set LIBSTRING=C:\AppDir
set LUMAP=Data=C:\AppData
set COMMAND="C:\Program Files\dL4\runc.exe" mastermenu.dl4
If a SCOPE command line login is desired, set the value of COMMAND to
scope.exe. For example,
set COMMAND="C:\Program Files\dL4\scopec.exe" -noshell
Note that the scopec "-noshell" option is added to prevent users from
trying to start non-dL4 programs such as "Word" which cannot be used
via dL4Login. Once dL4Login is installed and user profiles have been
created, users can login by connecting to the server with dL4Term using
the server address and port specified in the instlogn.bat command. A
port number is specified in dL4Term by connecting to "server:port"
instead of simply "server".
The dL4Login user profile supports an optional REALUSERID value. If
defined, the value is used as the actual login id. This feature can be
used to implement alternate user profiles with different environment
variable values for the same actual login id. The user must login using
the name of the user profile file (without the "u_" prefix). For
example, a profile named "u_fredacctg" with the line
set REALUSERID=fred
could be created for the user "fred" to start an accounting application.
To login, "fred" would type "fredacctg" as his login id along with his
normal password.
Before using dL4Login, please check your Windows server license to be
certain that you are in compliance with Microsoft user license rules.
Servers may need special configuration options to support more than
10 simultaneous connections via dL4Login.
o A new command line option, "-noshell", has been added to scopew.exe and
scopec.exe. The option disables running non-dL4 programs from a
SCOPE or BASIC command line. This option is intended for use with
the dl4login remote access service.
o Port communication now uses a global name space. This means that
terminal services and telnet users can now see and communicate via
PORT statements with other users running dL4 programs. All users will
have unique port numbers. The TERM utility can now display the status
of all dL4 programs and evict any session, even those belonging to
other users (as in dL4 for Unix).
o A new GUI mnemonic, 'WCPAD', has been implemented to create transparent
buttons. The WCPAD GUI element is not visible and any text or images
printed underneath the button area will be visible. A left mouse click
or left mouse double click anywhere in the specified area will send the
associated event string (usually a function key character) as input.
The behavior and usage of WCPAD is almost identical to WCBUTTON except
that the button is transparent, the button cannot be used as a default,
and the button does not react to the ENTER or TAB keys. If the element
is queried (WCQUERY), the position of the last "click" within the button
will be returned in window coordinates relative to the upper left
corner of the button. The coordinates will be sent as two decimal
integer strings each followed by a carriage return with the horizontal
coordinate sent first. The mnemonic syntax is
'n,x1,y1,x2,y2 WCPAD'
or
PChr$(n,x1,y1,x2,y2,"",0,s);'WCPAD'
where "n" is the element number, "x1", "y1", "x2", and "y2" are numeric
values specifying the upper left and lower right corners of the button
rectangle, and "s" defines a scaling value. If "s" is 10, the coordinates
returned by WCQUERY will be multiplied by 10 and the units will be tenths
of a column or row. The default scaling value is 1.
o A new GUI mnemonic, 'WCSHOWLIST', has been implemented to create read
only list boxes. The GUI elements created by the mnemonic are identical
to those created by the 'WCLIST' mnemonic except that the user is not
allowed to select items and the element value cannot be queried.
o Double clicking on the main window now selects the word underneath the
pointer.
o A tuning option has been implemented to redefine a "left mouse click" to
immediately send the word underneath the pointer as input along with a
carriage return. This option is enabled by adding 2048 (hexadecimal 800)
to the optional registry DWORD value
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\TuningOptions
or
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\TuningOptions
If this option is enabled, the standard left click actions to select
text will be disabled.
o The "Preferences->Windows" dialog has been extended to support disabling
the "Edit" and "Preferences" menus individually. Using this feature, it
is possible to move the "Preferences" menu to the less visible system
menu while leaving the "Edit" menu on the standard menu bar.
o The initial input mode can be set to "Insert" rather than "Replace" by
adding 1024 (hexadecimal 400) to the optional registry DWORD value
"Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Winterm\TuningOptions". The dL4 default
mode is "Replace" where newly typed characters overwrite any existing
characters at the same position. This new feature can be used to match
the default insert mode used by Windows and some other systems. With
this option enabled, the user will need to type the "insert" key to
toggle the input mode if the user wants to replace characters.
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver has been extended with an
open option, "nulls" or "nulls=true", to enable read and writing NULL
values to table columns. When a table is opened with the "nulls" option,
NULL values in numeric, date, or character columns are converted to
special values when they are read. When adding new records or modifying
existing records, NULL values can be written by writing the same
special values. Currently, the special values are -1E62 for numeric
values, "January 1, 0001" for date values, and "\xffff\" for strings.
Programs should not test for or set these values directly. Instead,
intrinsic functions have been provided to test for NULL values and to
set NULL values. The intrinsic function IsSQLNull() returns 1 when its
argument is a NULL value and 0 for all other values. The intrinsic
functions SQLNull(), SQLNull#(), and SQLNull$() return special NULL
values for numbers, dates, and strings. NULL values cannot be read
into or written from integer numeric variables or 1% date variables
because the special values cause overflow in those precisions (note
that integer or simple date columns can be read or written using
larger precisions). NULL values are not supported for binary variables
("B?"). NULL values can be used in keys and index columns, but it is
not recommended.
Example:
Declare Intrinsic Function IsSQLNull,SQLNull,SQLNull#,SQLNull$
Open #1,"(nulls)server:database.table" As "MSSQL Full-ISAM"
! Display table with possible NULL values
Do
Try Read Record #1;R. Else Exit Do
Print "Name = ";R.CustomerName$
Print "Appointment = ";
If IsSQLNull(R.AppointmentDate#)
Print "none"
Else
Print R.AppointmentDate#
End If
Loop
! Add new record with NULL value
R.CustomerName$ = "John Quinn"
R.AppointmentDate# = SQLNull#()
Add Record #1;R.
o The MySQL SQL driver now supports reading TIME values into numeric or
string variables. If read into a numeric variable, the time will be
converted to seconds from midnight.
o The MySQL SQL driver now supports reading TEXT values into string
variables.
o The MySQL SQL driver now supports reading backwards from the current
position in the result set using record -3.
o The MySQL SQL driver now reports the following new error codes when
appropriate:
279 SQL implementation or configuration limit exceeded
280 SQL procedure error
281 Constraint not satisfied
282 Deadlock detected
o The MySQL SQL and MySQL Full-ISAM drivers now use the MySQL 4.1 client
library to support MySQL 4.1 passwords.
o A new file BUILD option, "", has been implemented to create portable
contiguous or portable indexed contiguous files using BITS data
formats. Because BITS data formats are not portable between platforms,
this option should only be used by programs that need to use BITS
formats. Example:
Build #4,"[1:40]filename"
The BITS formats can also be selected by setting the NUMMAP option to
"BITS", "BITS-BE" (most significant byte first), or "BITS-LE"
(least significant byte first or Intel ordering).
o A BUILD option of "NUMMAP=IEEE-BE" has been implemented for contiguous
and indexed contiguous files. The option is equivalent to "IEEE".
o A new program option, "OPTION ARITHMETIC EXTENDED IEEE", has been
implemented to select 16-bit and 32-bit binary integer formats and
IEEE decimal floating point formats. The default "IEEE" option uses
BCD integers with a smaller range than the binary integer formats.
o Behavior change: CALL TRXCO() and "PORT 2" statements can no longer
send text commands to interactive ports unless the runtime parameter
DL4ACCEPTPORTCMDS is set to "TRUE" in the receiving port's environment.
This change has been made to improve user security. Phantom ports
always accept commands from any user.
o The "Selected Page Printer" driver now longer displays a printer
selection dialog if it is called from the dL4Login environment. If
used, the driver will select the default printer.
o A new script, "binarylp.bat", and a new printer profile, "binarylp.prf",
have been added to the "printer" directory as examples of a printer
using binary output.
o The intrinsic CALL PROGRAMDUMP() now supports a "byname" option to
sort variable names by name only instead of by type and name.
o The performance of the profile driver has been improved.
o Enhancement: when a forwarding error occurs in the email driver, a
"Forward address" string will be appended to the "file not found"
error text in the HELP command or the MSC$(2) function.
o Enhancement: CALL RDFHD() now supports file and directory names that
contain spaces.
o Behavior change: the TERM utility now assumes a 24 line screen for
paging if the terminal definition specifies a screen size of zero
or if the terminal type isn't specified when using scopec.exe or
runc.exe.
o A VARIABLE command has been added to the SCOPE BASIC and debug modes to
display a table of variable names used in the current procedure.
o Behavior change: the main window is now enlarged when a menu bar is
created if the standard menu bar is disabled at startup. Previously,
the window size was left unchanged and scroll bars were displayed. The
window is not enlarged if the scroll bars were already present.
o Behavior change: when using a WCNUMBER box, illegal input characters are
completely ignored and will not delete existing data if the BEGIN
mnemonic is used.
o Behavior change: when GUI elements are disabled, any "marked" items
will be displayed using the WCMARKCOLOR background color (if any).
o Behavior change: the Microsoft SQL Server and MySQL Full-ISAM drivers
now recognize "rtrim" as identical to "rtrim=true" in the open options.
o Behavior change: the formatting of attachments in the email driver has
been changed to improve compatibility with some email clients.
o Behavior change: the scope DISPLAY command and CALL PROGRAMDUMP() now
print quotation marks in string variables as two consecutive single
quotes. This is the format used by the LIST command when printing string
literal values in programs.
o Bug fixed: CALL PROGRAMDUMP() entered an infinite loop if a displayed
string variable contained more mnemonic characters than could be
shown on a single line. CALL PROGRMDUMP() also displayed only one line
of data for string variables.
o Bug fixed: double clicking an already selected item in a WCLIST box
generated a double click event but a subsequent WCQUERY to the box
did not return the selected item.
o Bug fixed: a required DLL, gdiplus.dll, wasn't always installed when
needed on Windows 2000 systems.
o Beta bug fixed: the TERM utility did not display open channels or blocked
channel status correctly when the displayed port had a large number of
channels open.
o Bug fixed: the Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver could not use
Windows authentication with SQL Server 2000 service pack 3 or later.
The driver now uses Windows authentication whenever the user name
and password options are NOT specified.
o Bug fix: scrolling backwards into the history buffer moved GUI elements
off of the current window, but scrolling forwards did not restore the
GUI elements.
o Bug fix: the socket driver waited forever if a bad address was supplied
and the OPENTIME timeout option wasn't specified. The driver will now
timeout after 60 seconds.
o Bug fix: various dL4Login user profile errors are now reported to the
user.
o Bug fix: the debugger LET command did not work and reported a "format"
error.
o Bug fix: the BATCH utility did not work.
o Bug fixed: CALL SORTINSTRING() sometimes caused memory violations.
o Bug fixed: CALL RDFHD() reported a random error, usually, "Illegal driver
operation", when the creation date, access date, or file id parameter
precision was too small to contain the returned value.
Apr 20 2005 (Release 6.1)
o A new intrinsic CALL, DRAWIMAGE(), has been added to display JPEG,
BMP, and other image files in a window or to a printer. The new
CALL has the following syntax:
Call DrawImage(Filename$, X1, Y1, X2, Y2)
or
Call DrawImage(Channel, Filename$, X1, Y1, X2, Y2)
where:
"Filename$" is the path of an image file,
"X1" and "Y1" are the horizontal and vertical coordinates of the
upper left corner of the rectangle in which the image should be
displayed,
"X2" and "Y2" are the horizontal and vertical coordinates of the
lower right corner of the rectangle in which the image should be
displayed.
The image will be displayed as large as possible within the display
rectangle without changing the aspect ratio of the image.
o Two new mnemonics, 'FITIMAGE' and 'FILLIMAGE', has been defined to
draw client system JPEG, BMP, and other image files in a window or on a
printer. The 'FITIMAGE' mnemonic draws an image as large as possible
in a specified rectangle without changing the aspect ration of the image.
The 'FILLIMAGE' mnemonic stretches or shrink the image as necessary to
fill the entire specified rectangle. Examples:
Print #1;PChr$("filepath",X1,Y1,X2,Y2);'FITIMAGE'
Print #1;PChr$("filepath",X1,Y1,X2,Y2);'FILLIMAGE'
where "X1" and "Y1" are the horizontal and vertical coordinates of the
upper left corner of the display rectangle and "X2" and "Y2" are the
coordinates of the lower right corner.
o A new mnemonic, 'WCEXTKEYS', has been defined to enable extended key
functionality in GUI programs. After printing the mnemonic 'WCEXTKEYS'
to a dL4 or dL4Term window, pressing the ENTER key will cause the
input focus to move from the current GUI element to the next GUI element
with a tab stop defined (this is identical to the behavior of the TAB
key). The 'WCEXTKEYS' mnemonic will also cause the ENTER key to
generate a new line when typed in a WCMEMO box. These two features can
be enabled or disabled individually by using a numeric parameter to the
'WCEXTKEYS' mnemonic as shown below:
'WCEXTKEYS' - enables both ENTER-as-TAB-between-GUI-elements
and ENTER-as-newline in WCMEMO box.
'1WCEXTKEYS' - enables only ENTER-as-TAB-between-GUI-elements.
'2WCEXTKEYS' - enables only ENTER-as-newline in WCMEMO box.
'3WCEXTKEYS' - enables both features.
'0WCEXTKEYS' - disables both features.
o The 'WCTEXT' mnemonic now supports an eighth parameter to define the
logical width of the text box and enable a horizontal scroll bar. This
feature is used to display text which is wider than the text box. The
following example defines a text box which is 40 character wide in the
window, but contains up to 80 character wide lines.
Print PChr$(10,20,5,60,9,"Label",2,80);'WCTEXT';
o The window driver has been enhanced to support a history scrollback
feature. The new feature is disabled by default, but can be enabled
by setting the "History Pages" value in the "Preferences->Window"
dialog. After settings the "History Pages" value, dL4 must be restarted
to use the new value.
o The range of GUI element numbers has been increased to 1 through 9999.
The previous range was 1 to 1000.
o A new Edit menu item, "Copy And Paste", has been added to copy and
paste selected text in a single action.
o A "RAW" option has been implemented in the DEF STRUCT statement for
structure members and for entire structures. This option can be used
with structures so that READ RECORD and WRITE RECORD statements will
use "Raw" file behavior when accessing contiguous files. This allows
placing numeric fields on odd byte boundaries, writing entire strings as
in MAT WRITE, and not including an extra character for string terminators
(when a string is DIMmed as 10 characters, a normal READ or WRITE treats
the field as being 11 characters long). Examples:
Def Struct CUSTREC : Raw
Member AString$[10]
Member 3%,ANumber
End Def
Def Struct CUSTREC
Member AString$[10] : Raw
Member 3%,ANumber
End Def
o The bridge driver has been extended to allow use of random record
numbers in SEARCH deallocate or insert operations if the "real record
number" option is being used.
o The MySQL SQL driver now supports a "db=" option in the "DL4MYSQL"
runtime/environment parameter. The "db=" option is equivalent to the
"database=" option.
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver now supports a "db=" option in the
"DL4MYSQLISAM" runtime/environment parameter. The "db=" option is
equivalent to the "database=" option.
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver now supports a "db=" option in
the "DL4MSSQLISAM" runtime/environment parameter. The "db=" option is
equivalent to the "database=" option. A "password=" option has been
added and is equivalent to "pswd=".
o The MySQL Full-ISAM and Microsoft SQL Full-ISAM drivers now support a
"readahead=n" open option where "n" is the number of rows to buffer
when reading sequentially in read-only (ROPEN) mode. Reading backwards
is not supported when "n" is greater than one.
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver now requires a MySQL server version of 4.0.3
or later for full functionality.
o A "serialize" open option has been added to the text file driver to
prevent multiple programs that are writing to the same text file from
intermixing their output. This option would normally be used when
appending to a log file. Example:
Open #1,"(serialize)logfile.txt"
Print #1;Tim#(0);": Process started"
If multiple lines are being written, all lines must be written in a
single statement or the lines may be intermixed.
o A new BUILD option has been added to the Portable and Universal indexed
contiguous file drivers. The "key=l1:l2:.." option creates indexes at
the same time the file is created. The option creates an index,
starting with index 1, for each of the key length values l1, l2,
through ln. The key lengths are specified in bytes. Example:
Build #3,"(key=10,6,16)[1:40]filename"
o A new SEARCH mode has been defined to search for the next allocated
record in a Portable or Universal indexed contiguous file. The new
mode is invoked by SEARCH mode 3 with an index value of 0. The
statement will return the next allocated record number greater than
the supplied record number. A key parameter is syntactically required
by the SEARCH statement, but it is not used by the new mode. Example:
Search #1,3,0;DummyKey$,RecNbr,Status
o A new open option, "ARGS=value", has been added to the pipe driver to
define an "ARGS" parameter to the driver selected by an "OPENAS="
option.
o The "TCP Socket" and "Socket Text" drivers now support an open option,
"OPENTIME=n", to cause OPEN statements to timeout after "n" seconds.
Example:
Open #3,"(opentime=10)www.dynamic.com" As "Socket"
o A new MSC() function, MSC(46), has been defined to return the original
line number at which a CALL stack propagated error occurred. For
example, if a "Divide by Zero" error occurred at line 150 of a procedure
which did not have an error handler and the caller did have an error
handler, SPC(10) would report the error as occurring at the CALL
statement. The new MSC(46) function will report the original error
line number of 150.
o The SCOPE debugger now supports the SPC(), MSC(), and HEX$() functions.
In addition, debugger expressions can now use relational operators,
logical operators, and concatenation.
o Program dumps (as from CALL ProgramDump()) display MSC() values 44
through 46.
o The intrinsic CALL DXMerge() can now support "include" files. Please see
the dynamicXport documentation for additional information on CALL
DXMerge().
o The tools/query utility has been enhanced with a "-k" option to count
the number of keys used in indexed contiguous file directories. A "-s"
option has been added to output Full-ISAM information in the form of
DEF STRUCT and MEMBER statements. The "/" character can no longer be
used as a lead-in for options.
o Behavior change: if access permissions can not be applied when creating
a file because the file system does not support permissions, the error
will be ignored and the file will be created without the unsupported
permissions.
o Beta bug fixed: the printer driver expected an incorrect parameter order
for the 'FITIMAGE' and 'FILLIMAGE' mnemonics.
o Bug fixed: potential memory corruption problems in the MySQL SQL driver,
the SQLV$() function, the SQLN$() function, and the SQLNV$() function
have been corrected.
o Bug fixed: screen corruption could occur when using some video adapters.
o Bug fixed: FoxPro Full-ISAM memo fields did not work on Linux x86
systems and possibly some other platforms.
o Bug fixed: when DL4DEFLU was defined but the directory specified in
DL4DEFLU didn't exist, an error occurred when building new files.
o Bug fixed: the VT100 terminal definition file did not clear the state
of the character attributes.
o Bug fixed: many of the standard terminal definition files did not draw
boxes or lines correctly.
o Bug fixed: the 'WCSETCOLOR' and 'WCMAKRCOLOR' mnemonics did not support
the special negative color values used to select window scheme colors.
o Bug fixed: sending a 'WCQUERY' to a 'WCLISTDROP' box that had been
'WCMARK'd before initializing the box values caused a memory violation.
o Bug fixed: GUI elements were not drawn correctly when disabled under
some conditions such as program specified colors.
o Bug fixed: the "OPENAS=" open option in the pipe driver can now select
the pipe driver itself as a driver.
o Bug fixed: a potentially long table scan occurred for each sequential
read in a non-unique index when using the MySQL Full-ISAM driver.
o Bug fixed: a memory violation occurred if columns beyond the end of the
line were selected and the DELETE key was pressed.
o Bug fixed: empty string values in the SQLV$() and SQLNV$() functions
caused random errors.
o Bug fixed: the "-c checksum" option of the tools/checksum utility did
not work in MD5 mode if the checksum value had less than 32 digits.
Aug 26 2004 (Maintenance Release 5.3.4)
o The email driver has been enhanced to support user authentication on
SMTP servers that require user authentication. To enable authentication,
the OPEN statement option parameters or the DL4EMAILSERVER runtime
parameter must specify the new "user" and "password" (or "pswd") options.
These options must not be specified unless the SMTP server supports
authentication. Examples:
Open #5,"(user=fred,password=secret,from=fred)henry" As "Email"
set DL4EMAILSERVER=smtp.something.com,user=fred,password=secret
In addition to the new "user", "password", and "pswd" options, an
additional "auth" option has been added to allow selection of a specific
authorization method. The email driver currently supports the three
most common methods: "LOGIN", "PLAIN", and "CRAM-MD5". The driver will
use the best method available on the SMTP server with preference given
to "CRAM-MD5" because it does not transmit the actual password over the
network. The "auth" option can be used to select the "LOGIN" or "PLAIN"
method if the SMTP server provides an incompatible "CRAM-MD5" method.
If the "auth" option selects a method that is not supported by the SMTP
server, the email driver will attempt to connect without authenticating
the user. Example:
set DL4EMAILSERVER=smtp.something.com,auth=login
Note: for compatibility with previous releases, the DL4EMAILSERVER value,
if defined, must begin with a server name.
o Bug fixed: the SCOPE DISPLAY command and program dumps did not list
string members of structure variables that had null ("") values.
Jun 23 2004 (Maintenance release 5.3.3)
o Two new printer drivers, "Terminal Printer" and "Default Terminal Printer"
have been added to open a named or the default printer via dL4Term on a
client PC.
o A new intrinsic CALL, UBSTRING(), and two new intrinsic functions,
UBASC() and UBCHR$(), have been added to provide uniBasic-like character
conversion routines. The parameters and return values of the routines
are identical to CALL STRING(), ASC(), and CHR$() except that ASCII
characters are mapped to the integer range 129 through 255 and uniBasic
compatible mnemonics are mapped to the range 1 through 127. These
routines can be used to simplify conversion of uniBasic programs to dL4.
o Bug fixed: the intrinsic CALLs UNPKDEC21(), UNPKDEC46(), UNPKRDX5019(),
and UNPKRDX5049() copied random data into the destination variable after
the unpacked data.
o Bug fixed: Mode 4 of CALL STRING() did not add a string terminator after
the converted character value.
o Bug fixed: the "Page Printer" driver could not open a quoted printer
name (needed for printer names with spaces).
May 21 2004 (Maintenance release 5.3.2)
o A new open option, "CONTENT=HTML" has been added to the email driver to
send email with HTML formatting commands. The driver enables HTML
formatting, but it does not add formatting commands itself. The
application is responsible for all HTML formatting commands as
shown in the following example:
Opts$ = "(From=someone,Content=html,Subject=''(test)'')"
Open #1,Opts$ + "somebody" As "Email"
Print #1;"This is bold and this is underlined."
Close #1
The open option "CONTENT=TEXT" selects non-HTML text format (the default).
o Bug fixed: percent sign ("%") and underscore ("_") characters were
converted to "\%" and "\_" when adding data to or searching in
MySQL tables using the MySQL driver or the MySQL Full-ISAM driver.
o Bug fixed: the Windows Page Printer driver, when used in binary output
mode, added a null at the end of each write.
May 11 2004 (Maintenance release 5.3.1)
o Bug fixed: the Replace$() and ReplaceCI$() intrinsic string functions
corrupted memory when replacing a single character with a multiple
character string.
o Bug fixed: CALL INPBUF() inserted typeahead characters at end of the
typeahead buffer when used with dL4Term instead of at the beginning of
the buffer as done for other terminal types.
Apr 14 2004 (Release 5.3)
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver has been enhanced to support keys that
contain the current record number when the Bridge driver is used with
the MySQL Full-ISAM driver or the Microsoft Full-ISAM driver. In the
Bridge profile, a record number segment of a key must reference the
IDENTITY column of the Full-ISAM table and use the NTOC(), STR(),
NTVNTOC(), or NTVSTR() functions to convert the IDENTITY column
value to a character format. To use this feature, the option
"RealRecordNumbers" must be enabled.
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver has been enhanced with two new conversion
functions: STR() and NTVSTR(). These functions are similar to NTOC()
and NTVNTOC(), but they use a simpler mask consisting only of spaces and
a single "#" character. The "#" character is replaced with a default
conversion of the number and any spaces are copied. The purpose of the
STR() and NTVSTR() functions is to duplicate fields that are created by
simple assignment or concatenation of numeric values:
TheKey$ = "Name", RecNo
Bridge profile example:
KeyPart=IDCOL,5,7,"","0123456789",STR("#")
o A new option has been added to the Full-ISAM Bridge driver profile to
support unbalanced indexes by allowing such indexes to be placed in
separate Indexed-Contiguous or Full-ISAM files outside the main Full-ISAM
file. For example, if index 3 of an Indexed-Contiguous file is used as
a scratch index with entries for only some of the file records (and is
thus unbalanced), that index could not be emulated by the Bridge driver
within the main Full-ISAM file because Full-ISAM files do not support
unbalanced indexes. Using the new option, the index can be emulated by
declaring an external index in the bridge profile. For example:
[Index3]
File=filename
Index=1
KeyPart=name,0,10
This example directs the bridge driver to perform all SEARCH operations
on index 3 by applying the SEARCH operations to index 1 of the Indexed
Contiguous file "filename". The bridge profile would also have to use
the "RealRecordNumbers" option described below so that the record
numbers in the keys of index 3 could be used to reference records in the
main Full-ISAM file. External indexes can have multiple keys for the
same record or use multiple key formats. The data in the key is
completely controlled by the application and does not need to be present
in any of the fields of the main Full-ISAM file. An external index
definition can only have one "KeyPart" entry and, if the external index
file is indexed contiguous, the field name is ignored (but it must be
specified).
External index files can either be Indexed Contiguous files or Full-ISAM
files. If an Indexed-Contiguous file is used, the bridge driver will
only access the index portion of the file. To use a Full-ISAM file as
an external index file, the following format must be used in the bridge
profile:
[Index3]
File=filename
Name=indexname
KeyPart=keyfieldname,0,10,,,Strip
RecPart=recnbrfieldname
where "filename" is the name of the external Full-ISAM file, "indexname"
is the name of the index within the Full-ISAM file, "keyfieldname" is the
name of the Full-ISAM field used for the key (this must be a character
field), and "recnbrfieldname" is the name of the Full-ISAM field used for
the record number (this must be a numeric field). External index
definitions can include "Filename", "Protection", "Options", "OpenAs",
and "OpenInProfileDirectory" entries using the same format and function
as such entries in the main bridge profile section. If the file
protection option is not specified, the protection options used to open
the main Full-ISAM file will be applied when opening the external index
file.
o A new option has been added to the Full-ISAM Bridge driver profile
to support programs that accidentally span a record boundary when
reading string values. When set to TRUE, the option "TruncateSpanning"
disables the normal "Illegal item number" (error 53) error that is
reported when a program reads a character variable whose length extends
beyond the end of the record. The driver will treat such reads as if
the read ended exactly at the end of the record. Example:
[FullISAMBridge]
File=filename
OpenAs=FoxPro Full-ISAM
TruncateSpanning=True
o A new option has been added to the Full-ISAM Bridge driver profile
to support programs reading records by record number. When set to TRUE,
the option "RealRecordNumbers" causes the driver to return the actual
Full-ISAM file record number when performing SEARCH statements that
return a record number. The record numbers returned by SEARCH can
then be used to perform random reads from the file. The option can
only be used with Full-ISAM drivers and files that support searching
index 0 for equal record numbers. Example:
[FullISAMBridge]
File=filename
OpenAs=FoxPro Full-ISAM
RealRecordNumbers=True
o The FoxPro Full-ISAM driver has been extended to support a SEARCH-equal
operation on index 0 using a record number as the key value. Such
searches can be performed on any FoxPro Full-ISAM file. Example:
SEARCH = #5,0;R
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver has been extended to support a SEARCH-equal
operation on index 0 using a record number as the key value. Such
searches can be performed only on tables that contain an AUTO_INCREMENT
column and a unique index based only on that column. The value of the
AUTO_INCREMENT column is treated as the record number of the row.
Example:
SEARCH = #5,0;R
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver has been enhanced to support tables whose
only unique index contains an AUTO_INCREMENT column.
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver has been enhanced to support the creation
of tables with numeric IDENTITY (AUTO_INCREMENT) columns. A table can
contain only one IDENTITY column which must be an integer type (such as
1%, 7%, %1, or %2). Creating a table with an IDENTITY column will
automatically create a unique index based on that column (the primary
key). Example:
Def Struct REC
Member S$ : Item "LABEL"
Member %2,Id : Item "IDCOL" : Identity
End Def
Dim Rec. As REC
Build #2,"test.table" As "MySQL Full-ISAM"
Define Record #2;Rec.
Close #2
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver has been extended to support
a SEARCH-equal operation on index 0 using a record number as the key
value. Such searches can be performed only on tables that contain an
IDENTITY column and a unique index based only on that column. The value
of the IDENTITY column is treated as the record number of the row.
Example:
SEARCH = #5,0;R
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver has been enhanced to support
tables whose only unique index contains an IDENTITY column.
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver has been enhanced to support
creating tables with the BUILD statement and deleting tables with the
KILL statement. An "AS" clause must be used with either statement to
specify the driver. Example:
KILL "(user=bill,pswd=notsosecret)test.info" AS "MSSQL Full-ISAM"
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver has been enhanced to accept a
default server name, database name, user name, and/or password from a new
runtime parameter, "DL4MSSQLISAM". The runtime parameter can be placed
in the environment or in the registry and supports the comma separated
options "server=name", ,"database=name", "user=name", "password="string",
and "pswd=string".
Example for a Windows command line shell:
C:\> Set DL4MSSQLISAM=server=myserver,user=anonymous
Note: defining passwords in the environment or the registry is insecure.
If at all possible, Windows Authentication based on the current login
should be used instead of explicit user names and passwords.
o A new GUI mnemonic, 'FRAME', has been defined for use with dL4Term or
dL4 for Windows. The new mnemonic draws a frame around a specified
rectangle. The mnemonic has two formats:
PChr$(Left,Top,Right,Bottom);'FRAME';
PChr$(Left,Top,Right,Bottom,Type$);'FRAME';
The optional "Type$" parameter specifies the frame style which can be
either "Sunken" ("S"), "Raised" ("R"), "Etched" (E), or "Bump" ("B").
If the "Type$" parameter is omitted or is "", the frame style will be
similar to that of a 'WCSTRING' input box. When using the 'FRAME'
mnemonic, sufficient space must be left around the rectangle to draw
the frame. The frame is not a GUI element; it is drawn graphically like
the 'RECT' mnemonic and the frame can be overwritten by characters or
graphics. The frame color is determined by the current Windows color
scheme and is not controlled by any of the color mnemonics.
o Four new GUI mnemonics, 'WCMSGASK', 'WCMSGERROR', 'WCMSGINFO', and
'WCMSGWARN', have been implemented to display standard Windows message
dialog boxes. All of the mnemonics have three formats as shown below
for the 'WCMSGASK' mnemonic:
PChr$("Message");'WCMSGASK';
PChr$("Message","Title");'WCMSGASK';
PChr$("Message","Title","Options");'WCMSGASK';
The "Options" string determines the number and labeling of the
buttons within the message box:
"ARI" "Abort", "Retry", "Ignore"
"O" "Ok"
"OC" "Ok", "Cancel"
"RC" "Retry", "Cancel"
"YN" "Yes", "No"
"YNC" "Yes", "No", "Cancel"
The characters in the "Options" string may be in lower or upper case,
but the first uppercase letter will select the associated button as the
default button. The message box returns as input the uppercase label
string of the button selected by the user followed by a carriage return.
Example:
Print PChr$("Continue?", "I/O Error", "yN");'WCMSGERROR';
Print 'IOEE K0';
Input "";I$
Select Case I$
Case "YES"
.
.
Case "NO"
.
.
End Select
o A new function, MSC$(9), has been implemented to return the native
absolute path of the directory containing the current program file.
o The tools/term utility has been enhanced to optionally display the
channels open on each monitored port. The "F" option ("term all mf")
shows each open channel number, the filename open on the channel, and,
if supported, the current record number. The record number is followed
by a letter showing the lock status of the record. The status letters
are "U" (unlocked), "L" (locked), and "B" (blocked waiting for a record
lock).
o The tools/term utility has been enhanced with a "B" option to display
only ports that are blocked waiting for a record lock. For each
blocked port, the utility finds and displays the port number of the
program which is currently locking the desired record. Example:
term all mb
o New options have been added to the tools/query utility. The "-p" option
enables division of long displays into screen sized pages. The "-l",
"-l=$printer", "-l=path" options direct output to the "$lpt" printer,
"$printer" printer, or the "path" text file respectively.
o The PORT mode 7 statement has been enhanced to optionally return the
group name, current directory path, terminal type, numeric account, and
numeric group for the selected port. The group name, numeric account,
and numeric group values are returned as "" under Windows.
PORT portnum,7,status,userid$,station$,group$,dir$,term$,usern$,grpn$
Note that the PORT mode 7 statement may have between 5 and 10 parameters.
o The PORT statement has been extended with a new mode, 8, that returns
the open channels on the specified port. The statement
PORT portnum,8,status,firstchan,lastchan,chaninfo.[]
returns open channel information into the array 'chaninfo.[]' for
channels between 'firstchan' and 'lastchan'. The 'chaninfo.[]'
variable must be an array of structures using the following structure
definition:
Def Struct CHANINFO
Member 1%,ChanNum
Member Path$[200]
Member 3%,RecordNum
Member 1%,RecordState
End Def
The member names, dimensioned size of the Path$ member, and the numeric
precisions of the other structure members can be varied as desired. The
filename returned in Path$ may be truncated if it is longer than Path$
or if it exceeds system limitations. If the number of open channels in
the specified range is less than the dimensioned size of 'chaninfo.[]',
then the first unused element of the array will have a ChanNum value
of -1. If the number of open channels in the specified range is greater
than the dimensioned size of 'chaninfo.[]', the extra channels will
be ignored.
o The PORT statement has been extended with a new mode, 9, that determines
if a specified file is open on the port and optionally determines if
a specified record number is locked in the file. The statement
PORT portnum,9,status,filepath$,recordnum,channum
performs an inquiry on port 'portnum' to determine if it has 'filepath$'
open on a channel with the record 'recordnum' locked. If 'recordnum'
is negative, the search will be performed using only the file path. If
a match is found, the channel open to the file will be returned in
'channum'. If a match is not found, then 'channum' will be set to
-1.
o The CALL MONITOR() procedure in the tools/oldcalls.lib compatibility
library has been enhanced to return current directory, terminal type,
and open channel information.
o A new open option has been added to the Windows Page Printer driver.
The "wrap=" option enables or disables line wrapping for
lines that exceed the maximum line length. The default is to disable
line wrapping and truncate long lines. Example:
OPEN #5,"(wrap=true)$selectlp"
o The EOPEN statement and the intrinsic CALL LOCK() can now be used
with text files. If a text file is opened using EOPEN or locked with
CALL LOCK(), the file cannot be opened by other dL4 users. Unlike
portable contiguous and formatted files, the EOPEN statement will succeed
on text files that have been opened for shared usage by other ports.
o The intrinsic CALL SORTINSTRING() has been extended to support sorting
arrays of strings or arrays of structures where the first structure
member is a string. New formats:
Call SortInString(status,keycnt,keylen,keys$[],work$)
Call SortInString(status,keycnt,keylen,keys.[],work.)
The 'work$' and 'work.' variables should be identical to individual
elements of the 'keys$[]' and 'keys.[]' arrays. The 'keylen' value
specifies the maximum number of significant characters in the sorted
values and can be used to perform a sort on the first 'keylen'
characters of each key value.
o The statement
SYSTEM 33,"C:\\Program Files\\Application\\program.exe",S
will try to execute "program.exe" on the user's PC. The variable
"S" will be set to zero if the program was successfully started and
non-zero if the program couldn't be started. Unlike SYSTEM or
SYSTEM 31, the statement does not wait for the program to finish
and exit. In the default configuration, the user will be prompted via
a message box to permit or deny running the command. The DWORD
registry value
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\AllowSYSTEMCmd
or
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\AllowSYSTEMCmd
can be set to one to automatically accept commands without displaying
the message box (note: if set to zero, an "AllowSYSTEMCmd" value in
HKEY_CURRENT_USER will require the message box no matter how the
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE value is set).
o The console versions of dL4, scopec.exe and runc.exe, now support the
use of dL4Term as a client under Windows telnet servers. The "Windows
Terminal Printer" driver has been added to dL4 for Windows for use
with dL4Term.
o The dL4 QUERY utility (tools/query) has been extended to display
whether a Full-ISAM field is an IDENTITY field.
o Behavior change: the object revision in program files is now set more
accurately. This improvement will permit more programs saved under a
current version of dL4 to run under older versions of dL4.
o Behavior change: the SYSTEM statement now searches additional directories
when attempting to execute an operating system command. For example,
the SYSTEM statement can now execute "iexplore.exe" (Internet Explorer)
without an absolute path to the executable.
o Behavior change: WCNUMBER boxes now accept commas as valid input
characters. If the WCNUMBER box value is queried, the commas will
not be returned as part of the value.
o Behavior change: WCTEXT boxes no longer display scroll bars if the
number of lines is exactly equal to the size of the text box.
o Behavior change: tab characters in source line comments are expanded
into spaces using the indentation value as the tab width.
o Bug fixed: the dL4 IC2FI (tools/ic2fi) utility did not allow users to
convert files if the original key length of an index was longer than
the key length in the bridge profile. This prevented conversion of
files because key lengths in Indexed Contiguous files are normally
rounded up to even values and are thus longer than the actual key size.
The utility now displays a warning message, but allows the user to
continue conversion.
o Bug fixed: using the CHF() function with the Microsoft SQL Full-ISAM
driver caused any subsequent SEARCH, READ, WRITE, ADD, or DELETE
statement using the same channel to fail.
o Bug fixed: when using the Microsoft SQL or MySQL Full-ISAM drivers with
an identity column as the unique index, an attempt to modify the identity
column could sometimes cause the wrong row to be modified.
o Bug fixed: the PORT 6 statement returned zero instead of -1 when the
blocking port number was unknown.
o Bug fixed: the Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM did not support record
number based SEARCH statements if there was a non-IDENTITY based index
that had a key size smaller than the IDENTITY based index (a key size
of 3 or fewer characters). This prevented the Full-ISAM Bridge driver
from supporting the "RealRecordNumbers" option.
Dec 5 2003 (Maintenance release 5.2.4)
o Bug fixed: GUI element labels and list box items were not sized correctly
if the GUI element font size differed from the standard dialog font size.
o Bug fixed: if the canvas was taller than the window, the display was
corrupted and the scroll bar did not work.
o Bug fixed: if the main window was minimized and then restored, scroll
bars were displayed.
o Bug fixed: a scroll bar was displayed in a GUI list box if the number of
elements equaled the maximum number that could be displayed in the box.
Aug 12 2003 (Maintenance release 5.2.3)
o Bug fixed: the scroll bars did not work when the window was smaller
than the canvas.
o Bug fixed: memory violations occurred with some combinations of fonts
and font sizes.
o Bug fixed: the DUPLICATE statement produced incorrect filenames for
FoxPro Full-ISAM files if a trailing "!" was used.
Jul 21 2003 (Maintenance release 5.2.2)
o A new intrinsic function, CALLSTAT$(), has been implemented to return
a string describing the program position at a specified level in the
procedure stack. This function would typically be used to generate
information for an error log. The procedure stack includes all function,
procedure, Call-Subprogram, and SWAP levels. The level type ("Swap",
"SubPgm", "ExtSub", "ExtFunc", "IntSub", "IntFunc", or "") is returned
in a function argument. The current position is level 0, the caller is
level 1, and so on. An error 38 is generated if a non-existent level
is specified.
BASIC syntax:
CallStat$(Level, LevelType$)
Example:
Print "Caller position is ";CallStat$(1,Type$)
Print "Caller type is ";Type$
o Behavior change: copy/paste operations now supply spaces between
pasted characters when necessary.
o Bug fixed: the bridge driver could not insert records in a MySQL table if
a key contained a DECIMAL(n,0) column.
o Bug fixed: the makehuge utility could not convert files that used key
translation.
o Bug fixed: CALL DATE() did not properly convert six character dates to
eight character dates.
o Bug fixed: the socket driver did not work if certain third-party network
driver extensions were installed on the system.
o Bug fixed: some rare situations would cause the main window to freeze.
o Bug fixed: input did not work with bidirectional auxiliary devices.
o Bug fixed: the edit menu was sometimes printed as part of a print
screen operation.
o Bug fixed: the FoxPro Full-ISAM driver "dataext" option created files with
duplicated extensions ("file.ext.ext").
o Bug fixed: the DXTESTIN, DXTESTOUT, and DXTESTCOPY environment variables
could not be set via CALL ENV() and used with the dynamicXport CALLs.
May 14 2003 (Maintenance release 5.2.1)
o A new printer type, "Bidirectional Device", is now supported as an
auxiliary printer in the "Preferences->Aux Printer" dialog. When
enabled, this printer type allows both writing to and reading from a
device such as a serial port.
o The raw file driver now supports a CRTOCRLF open option to append
a line feed character when writing carriage return characters. This
option is also available for the auxiliary printer and can be enabled
in "Preferences->Aux Printer->Options".
o The "TCP Listen Socket" driver has been enhanced to accept a new OPEN
option. The new "REUSE" option enables the driver to open a socket
with a port number that is already in use. This option is needed to
support certain network protocols and to avoid error 76 ("File or
device is open elsewhere") when re-opening a previously used TCP
port number. Example:
Open #1,"(reuse):9631" As "TCP Listen Socket"
o The "MySQL SQL" and "MySQL Full-ISAM" drivers have been enhanced to
accept a "PORT=" option in the OPEN statement or in the
DL4MYSQL/DL4MYSQLISAM runtime parameters. This option makes it
possible to use MySQL servers with non-default port numbers.
o A new intrinsic CALL, IMSPACK(), has been implemented to provide
compatibility with CALL $PACK in IMS BASIC. The syntax of CALL
IMSPACK() is:
Call IMSPack(Mode, Src$, Dest$)
Call IMSPack(Mode, Dest$, Src$)
where "Mode" equals zero packs characters from "Src$" into "Dest$"
and a non-zero "Mode" unpacks characters from "Src$" into "Dest$".
The packing algorithm uses a radix 50 style mechanism.
o A new intrinsic CALL, TRANSLATE(), has been added to translate strings to
or from binary strings according to a specified character set. The syntax
and arguments of CALL TRANSLATE() are:
Call Translate(DestCnt,Dest$,SrcCnt,Src?,CharSet$)
Call Translate(DestCnt,Dest?,SrcCnt,Src$,CharSet$)
DestCnt - receives the number of characters translated into the
destination.
Dest$ - destination string that receives the characters
translated from Src?.
Dest? - destination binary string that receives the characters
translated from Src$.
SrcCnt - receives the number of characters translated from the
source.
Src$ - source string of characters to be translated. String
terminator characters are copied as data and the source
size is controlled by the total size of the variable
and any double subscripting.
Src? - source binary string of bytes to be translated. The
source size is controlled by the total size of the
variable and any double subscripting.
CharSet$ - character set name such as "ASCII", "ANSI", or "UTF-8".
If a character cannot be translated, translation will stop. Translation
errors can be detected by comparing the returned source translation count
to the source size.
o A new option, "P", has been added to the "TERM" utility to page long
listings of active ports. The command "term all mp" would list all
active ports in screen sized pages.
o A new option "ADD" has been implemented in the "PGMCACHE" utility
to manual add permanent entries to the program cache. The command
"pgmcache add filename" would add the program or library "filename"
to the program cache. The file would remain in the cache until the
cache itself was deleted or the system was restarted.
o A new option, "uselust", has been added to the DL4LUST runtime parameter
to import a search path from the "LUST" environment variable. The
imported search path is placed after any entries in DL4LUST.
o The SCOPE BASIC mode LIST command now supports a "-c" option to disable
paging of the listing.
o A new option, "/t description-string", has been added to dl4servr.exe
to configure a descriptive string when installing a dl4servr service.
o Behavior change: flicker is reduced, under some conditions, when
adding text to a text or edit box.
o Bug fixed: the display window was sometimes displayed in an incorrect
position in the base window after the window had been maximized and
the 'NR'/'WD' mnemonics had been used.
o Bug fixed: when an indexed contiguous file was opened in read-only mode
(ROPEN), recent changes to the index were sometimes ignored.
o Bug fixed: the CHARSET and NUMMAP options could not be used when building
a formatted file.
Apr 7 2003 (Release 5.2)
o Two new GUI mnemonics, 'WCSETCOLOR' and 'WCRESETCOLOR', have been defined
to set the text and background colors in newly created GUI elements. The
'WCSETCOLOR' mnemonic copies the current window foreground and background
colors. Alternatively, the 'fg bg WCSETCOLOR' mnemonic uses two numeric
parameters, the text and background colors. The 'WCRESETCOLOR' mnemonic
restores the standard system colors. The 'WCSETCOLOR' and 'WCRESETCOLOR'
mnemonics can be printed directly to a GUI element to immediately change
the text and background colors for that GUI element.
o A new GUI mnemonic, 'WCMARKCOLOR', has been defined to set the text and
background colors for items that have been selected by the user in GUI
list boxes ('WCLIST', 'WCEDITLIST', ...). The colors are also used for
items selected by the 'WCMARK mnemonic. If the 'WCMARKCOLOR' mnemonic
is printed to a window, all GUI list elements subsequently created in
that window will use the specified colors. The 'WCMARKCOLOR' mnemonic
can be printed to a GUI element box to set or change selection colors
in only that GUI element. The 'WCMARKCOLOR' mnemonic has three formats:
'WCMARKCOLOR' - use the current window text and background
colors
'fg WCMARKCOLOR' - use "fg" as the text color and the current
window background color
'fg,bg WCMARKCOLOR' - use "fg" as the text color and "bg" as the
background color.
The color values "fg" and "bg" are numbers between -6 and 2^24 as used
in the 'FONTCOLOR' and 'BACKCOLOR' mnemonics. The 'WCRESETCOLOR'
mnemonic can be used to restore the standard selection colors. As
with all other GUI mnemonics, this mnemonic can only be used with
dL4Term or in dL4 for Windows.
o Color can now be controlled on a character by character basis within
the list boxes of 'WCLIST', 'WCEDITLIST', 'WCDROPLIST', and 'WCEDITDROP'
GUI elements. The text and background colors are set using the normal
'FONTCOLOR' and 'BACKCOLOR' mnemonics.
o Four new standard color numbers have been defined for use with all
color mnemonics such as 'FONTCOLOR'. These negative colors numbers are
defined as follows:
-3 System standard window text color
-4 System standard window background color
-5 System standard highlighted text color
-6 System standard highlighted text background color
o A new mnemonic, 'n WCASKCOLOR', has been implemented to display the
standard window color selection dialog and return the color selected,
if any, by the user. The mnemonic requires a single numeric parameter
which is the default RGB color for the dialog. The dialog returns the
selected color as a decimal input string followed by a carriage return.
If no color is selected, a null string will be returned followed by a
carriage return.
o Double clicking on edit box elements such as WCSTRING or WCTEXT can now
be detected by using the 'WCACTION' mnemonic to set the double click
action string as action number 2. Example:
PRINT PCHR$(10,2,'F40');'WCACTION';
o Window contents can now be printed to a user selected printer by sending
a print screen mnemonic ('PS') to a window or by the user selecting the
"Edit->Print Window" menu.
o The main window can now be maximized to occupy the entire screen. The
new "Preferences->Frame" dialog configures the pattern and colors used
to fill the area outside the display window.
o Double clicking on list box elements or buttons can now be detected
by using the 'WCACTION' mnemonic to set the double click action string
as action number 2. Example:
PRINT PCHR$(10,2,'F40');'WCACTION';
o A new driver, "MySQL SQL", has been implemented so that applications
can use SQL statements to issue commands and queries to a MySQL server.
The driver allows an application to access the full capabilities of
MySQL including both standard SQL syntax and MySQL specific features.
Due to MySQL licensing requirements, the driver cannot be used without
a special SSN product option. Please contact the Dynamic Concepts Sales
department for information on obtaining the required SSN.
The OPEN statement uses a special filename syntax with two formats:
"server:database" and "database". Rather than opening a specific table,
the OPEN statement creates a connection to a MySQL server and sets the
default database to be used by SQL statements. If the server name is not
specified, the system on which the program is running will be used as the
server (unless a default server is specified in the DL4MYSQL runtime
parameter, see below). The OPEN statement also supports four comma
separated options: "user=name", "password=string", "pswd=string", and
"rtrim=boolean". These options supply server login identification and, in
the case of "rtrim", control whether character fields are returned space
filled (default) or with trailing spaces removed ("rtrim=true").
Examples:
OPEN #1,"mysystem:accounting" AS "MySQL SQL"
OPEN #5,"(user=bill,pswd=secret)testdb" AS "MySQL SQL"
The server name and login information can be specified in the
environment variable "DL4MYSQL" which supports the comma separated
options "server=name", "user=name", "password="name", and "pswd=name".
Example for a Unix command line shell:
$DL4MYSQL="server=myserver,user=anonymous"
$export DL4MYSQL
$scope
SQL statements are executed by using SEARCH statements. Each SEARCH
statement specifies a channel open to a MySQL server and an SQL
statement as a character string. Examples:
SEARCH #1;"select * from testtable"
SEARCH #5;"update acctgtbl set balance=123.45 where account=19765"
SEARCH #5;"drop table testtable"
If the statement fails, an error will occur. Syntax errors in SQL
statements are reported as error 274, "SQL syntax error".
After an SQL SELECT statement is successfully executed, the number of
rows in the result set can be determined by using the CHF(channel)
function. The result set itself is read by using normal READ and
READ RECORD statements. An error 52, "record not found", will be
reported by any statement attempting to read beyond the end of the
result set. Example:
Search #7;"select account, balance from acctgtbl"
Print Chf(7);"rows returned by query"
Do
Try Read #7;Account,Balance Else Exit Do
Print "Account =";Account;" ";Balance =";Balance
Loop
Note: the result set of the current SQL SELECT statement is copied into
memory by the dL4 SEARCH statement. SELECT statements should be written
so as to limit the size of the result set to a reasonable value. An SQL
LIMIT clause can be used in the SQL SELECT statement to restrict the
maximum size of the set.
The MAP RECORD statement can be used to map structure variable members
according to their item names to the columns returned by a query. In
the following example, the SQL select statement returns a two column
result "account, balance" which is mapped into a structure variable
that uses the opposite ordering:
Def Struct RSET
Member 3%,Balance : Item "balance"
Member 3%,Acct : Item "account"
End Def
Dim R. As RSET
Search #7;"Select account, balance from acctgtbl"
Print Chf(7);"rows returned by query"
Map Record #7 As RSET
Do
Try Read Record #7;R. Else Exit Do
Print "Account =";R.Acct;" ";Balance =";R.Balance
Loop
NULL values in numeric, date, or character columns are converted to
special values when they are read. When adding new rows or modifying
existing rows, NULL values can be written by using the same special
values. In this version of dL4, the special values are -1E62 for
numeric values, "January 1, 0001" for date values, and "\xffff\" for
strings. Programs should not test for or set these values directly.
Instead, new intrinsic functions have been provided to test for NULL
values and to set NULL values. The intrinsic function IsSQLNull()
returns 1 when its argument is a NULL value and 0 for all other values.
The intrinsic functions SQLNull(), SQLNull#(), and SQLNull$() return
the special NULL values for numbers, dates, and strings. NULL values
cannot be read into or written from integer numeric variables or 1% date
variables. NULL values are not supported for binary variables ("B?").
Three new intrinsic functions, SQLV$(), SQLN$(), and SQLNV$() are
provided to make it easier to construct SQL statements. The SQLV$()
function takes one or more arguments of any non-array type and returns
a string containing the argument values encoded for use by an SQL
driver. The SQL driver detects such encoded values in the SEARCH
statement string and formats the values as required by the SQL server.
This formatting guarantees proper quoting of character string values and
places commas between each value. If the argument is a structure
variable, each member of structure is encoded. The SQLN$() function
takes a single structure variable argument and returns a string
containing the member item names encoded for the SQL driver with commas
separating each name. The SQLNV$() function takes a single structure
variable argument and returns a string containing the member names and
values encoded for the SQL driver with equals signs ("=") and commas.
Examples:
Search #1;"Insert test (count,label) Values ("+SQLV$(C,L$)+")"
Search #1;"Insert test ("+SQLN$(R.)+") Values ("+SQLV$(R.)+")"
Search #1;"Update test Set "+SQLNV$(R.)+" where count=19"
o A new driver, "MySQL Full-ISAM", has been implemented to support
Full-ISAM and Bridge access to MySQL database tables. Due to MySQL
licensing requirements, this driver cannot be used without a special
SSN product option. Please contact the Dynamic Concepts Sales department
for information on obtaining the required SSN.
The MySQL driver implements the standard Full-ISAM driver interface with
the following modifications:
1. The InnoDB table type must be used in order to support
record locking. Other table types may be usable, but they
will not support record locking.
2. A table must have at least one unique index in order to
support reading or writing. A table without a unique index
can be opened only to extract table information or to add
indexes.
3. The OPEN statement uses a special filename syntax with the
two formats: "server:database.table:" and "database.table". If
the server name is not specified, the system on which the program
is running will be used as the server. The OPEN statement also
supports four comma separated options: "user=name",
"password=string", "pswd=string", and "rtrim=boolean". These
options supply server login identification and, in the case of
"rtrim", control whether character fields are returned space
filled (default) or with trailing spaces removed ("rtrim=true").
Examples:
OPEN #1,"mysystem:accounting.customers" AS "MySQL Full-ISAM"
OPEN #5,"(user=bill,pswd=secret)test.info" AS "MySQL Full-ISAM"
4. The KILL statement uses the same filename syntax as the OPEN
statement and supports the "user=name", "password=string", and
"pswd=string" options. Example:
KILL "(user=bill,pswd=secret)test.info" AS "MySQL Full-ISAM"
The server name and login information can be specified in the
environment variable "DL4MYSQLISAM" which supports the comma separated
options "server=name", "user=name", "password="name", and "pswd=name".
Example for a Unix command line shell:
$DL4MYSQLISAM="server=myserver,user=anonymous"
$export DL4MYSQLISAM
$scope
The MySQL driver has been tested with MySQL versions 3.23.42 through
3.23.53. InnoDB tables are an optional feature of MySQL and require
installing both an InnoDB capable version of MySQL and setting optional
configuration parameters. Please see the MySQL documentation for
information on installing and configuring a MySQL server.
o The new MySQL Full-ISAM driver has an open option, "nulls=true", to
support read and writing NULL values to table columns. When a table
is opened with the "nulls=true" option, NULL values in numeric, date,
or character columns are converted to special values when they are read.
When adding new records or modifying existing records, NULL values can
be written by writing the same special values. Currently, the special
values are -1E62 for numeric values, "January 1, 0001" for date values,
and "\xffff\" for strings. Programs should not test for or set these
values directly. Instead, new intrinsic functions have been provided
to test for NULL values and to set NULL values. The intrinsic function
IsSQLNull() returns 1 when its argument is a NULL value and 0 for all
other values. The intrinsic functions SQLNull(), SQLNull#(), and
SQLNull$() return special NULL values for numbers, dates, and strings.
NULL values cannot be read into or written from integer numeric variables
or 1% date variables. NULL values are not supported for binary variables
("B?"). NULL values can be used in keys and index columns, but it is not
recommended.
Example:
Declare Intrinsic Function IsSQLNull,SQLNull,SQLNull#,SQLNull$
Open #1,"(nulls=true)server:database.table" As "MySQL Full-ISAM"
! Display table with possible NULL values
Do
Try Read Record #1;R. Else Exit Do
Print "Name = ";R.CustomerName$
Print "Appointment = ";
If IsSQLNull(R.AppointmentDate#)
Print "none"
Else
Print R.AppointmentDate#
End If
Loop
! Add new record with NULL value
R.CustomerName$ = "John Quinn"
R.AppointmentDate# = SQLNull#()
Add Record #1;R.
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver supports the special MySQL date value of
0000-00-00. Such date values can now be read into date variables and
will set the date variable to be "Not-A-Date". The special value of
0000-00-00 can be written by writing a date value of "Not-A-Date". A
date variable can be set to "Not-A-Date" by the CLEAR statement
("CLEAR D#"). An error 15 will occur if a "Not-A-Date" value is used
in a date function or date expression.
o The MySQL Full-ISAM driver reports character fields in indexes as
case insensitive when a GET statement retrieves index information
(if the MySQL server is using the standard case insensitive character
set). When creating a table, the driver will accept index field
definitions that are either case sensitive or case insensitive. The
actual case sensitivity is always controlled by the MySQL server.
o The KILL statement now supports an options field "(...)" before each
filename to supply driver options. Example:
KILL "(user=fred,password=secret)mytable" AS "MySQL Full-ISAM"
The SCOPE/BASIC KILL command does not support deleting MySQL tables.
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver has been extended to support Full-ISAM
date fields and translation of field types. A date field is used
by specifying a translation function in the field definition that
defines how to translate a date value to or from a character or
numeric field. Translation functions also support converting
Full-ISAM numeric fields to Indexed-Contiguous character key fields.
Additional functions support subscripted character fields for key
fields or case-insensitive key fields. The translation functions
are:
DTOC(mask) Convert the Full-ISAM date field to a character string
in the record image using "mask". All dates use local
date/time. When the DTOC() function is used in an
index definition, the "mask" must define a sortable
date. For example, "YYMMDD" is a legal index mask, but
"MMDDYY" is not because it would not sort correctly.
"mask" is a quoted string in which the following
substrings have special meaning:
YYYY Four digit year
YY Two digit year with the century set so
it is within 50 years of the current
date.
AA Two digit year in which years after 1999
are specified as "A0" through "E9".
MM Zero filled month, 1 - 12
DD Zero filled day of month, 1 - 31
DDD Zero filled day of year, 1 - 366
DDDDD Zero filled day relative to base year
1968. January 1, 1968 is "00001".
Six or more "D"s can be also be used.
HH Zero filled hour of day
MM Zero filled minute of hour
SS Zero filled second of minute
DTON(mask) Convert Full-ISAM date field to a decimal number
in the record image using "mask". All dates
use local date/time. "mask" is a quoted string
defining the decimal digits of the number. The
following substrings in the mask have special meanings:
YYYY Four digit year
YY Two digit year with the century set so
it is within 50 years of the current
date.
MM Month, 1 - 12
DD Day of month, 1 - 31
DDD Day of year, 1 - 366 or 0 - 365
DDDDD Day relative to base year 1968.
January 1, 1968 is 1. Six or more
"D"s can be also be used.
HH Hour of day
MM Minute of hour
SS Second of minute
NTOC(mask) Convert Full-ISAM numeric field to a character
string according to the USING mask "mask". The
mask must use a period (".") for any decimal point
point and comma as any grouping separator.
NTVNTOC(mask) Convert Full-ISAM numeric field to a character
string according to the USING mask "mask" and using
locale information to determine the decimal point
character. The mask must use a period (".") for any
decimal point and comma as any grouping separator.
LEFT(len) Use the first "len" characters of the field. This
function can only be used in index definitions and
the field must also be used in the "[Record]" section.
UCASE(len) Use the first "len" characters of the field converted
to uppercase. This function can only be used in index
definitions and the field must also be used in the
"[Record]" section.
LCASE(len) Use the first "len" characters of the field converted
to lowercase. This function can only be used in index
definitions and the field must also be used in the
"[Record]" section.
Example:
Field=LASTPAYMNT,114,2%,DTON("YYDDD")
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver profile has been extended to support two
new conversion functions, IFNULL and IFERR, that convert SQL NULL or
invalid values to and from the values needed in the emulated indexed
contiguous file record. The IFNULL function takes a single string
argument which defines a string or number that is stored into the
converted field whenever a NULL is read. When a record is written,
the same value will be converted to a NULL. Examples:
Field=COUNT,28,4%,,,IFNULL("-1")
Field=ACCTID,16,12,,,NTOC("-------#.##"),IFNULL("N/A"),Strip
In order to read or write NULLs, the SQL driver options in the bridge
profile must be set to enable reading and writing nulls (for the
MySQL Full-ISAM driver, see the "nulls=true" option described above).
The IFERR function is similar to the IFNULL function, but it is applied
to invalid numeric or date values. In this release of dL4, the only
possible invalid value is the special MySQL date value of "0000-00-00".
If no IFERR function is specified, an invalid value results in an error.
In the following example, MySQL "0000-00-00" dates are converted to -1
while actual dates are converted to decimal numbers in the form
"YYYYMMDD":
Field=DATE1N,60,3%,,,DTON("YYYYMMDD"),IFERR("-1")
In this example, "0000-00-00" dates in a key part are converted to the
string "00000000" while actual dates are converted to strings in the
format "YYYYMMDD":
KeyPart=DATE1,0,8,"","0123",DTOC("YYYYMMDD"),IFERR("00000000")
Both IFNULL and IFERR functions can be used in the same field or key
part definition.
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver profile has been extended to support filler
fields. A filler field is any record field with a field name beginning
with an asterisk. Filler fields are not read from the Full-ISAM file,
but they are initialized to the fill character or zeroed if the fill
character is not defined. The filler name is treated as a comment.
Example:
Field=*fillerwithnulls*,54,5
Field=*fillerwithblanks*,59,5,," "
o A new option has been added to the Full-ISAM Bridge driver profile to
disable use of temporary record values when inserting or modifying
records. The temporary values are normally used to reserve key values
after SEARCH mode 4 insert statements and thus prevent other programs
from inserting the same key. If the new "ProtectKeys=False" option is
specified in the initial section of a bridge profile, SEARCH mode 4
statements will check for the current existence of a key value, but the
Full-ISAM file will not be modified until all keys have been inserted
for the record. This option improves Bridge driver performance and
allows use of foreign key constraints in SQL tables. If the option is
used, duplicate key errors may occur after a successful SEARCH mode 4
insertion of the key. Bridge profile example:
[FullISAMBridge]
File=filename
OpenAs=FoxPro Full-ISAM
ProtectKeys=False
o The Full-ISAM Bridge driver support of SEARCH mode 6 (search less than)
has been improved. Statements such as
SEARCH #Chan,6,IdxNum;"{",R,S
can now be used on indexes that use date or numeric conversion functions.
The driver will detect that the key value is greater than any possible
key value and will search for the last key in the specified index. In
the previous release, the key value "{" would have caused an error in
the conversion function because "{" is an illegal value.
o The numeric precision syntax in Full-ISAM Bridge profile files has been
extended to specify the number of decimal places needed. The new,
optional format is "p.d%" where "p" is the dL4 numeric precision (1-4)
and "d" is the number of decimal places. Thus "3.2%" would specify a 10
digit floating point format with two decimal places. The decimal place
information is used by the tools/ic2fi utility to create Full-ISAM
files when the Full-ISAM driver supports only fixed point, rather than
floating point, numbers. Example:
Field=COST,80,3.2%
o The tools/ictofi utility program has been replaced with a new utility,
tools/ic2fi, that offers similar, but greatly improved, features to
convert from Indexed-Contiguous files to Full-ISAM files. The new
utility can also be CALLed as a subprogram to perform automated or
repetitive conversion of Indexed-Contiguous files. The ic2fi utility
is documented in the dL4 5.2 Product Training manual which can be
downloaded from www.dynamic.com or ftp.dynamic.com.
o The tools/buildfi utility program has been enhanced to allow selection
of the Full-ISAM type (FoxPro or SQL) and to improve error handling.
o A new driver, "Socket Text", has been added to provide text line oriented
I/O to TCP sockets. Driver arguments and usage is identical to the
raw socket driver except that READ and INPUT statements will read data
in lines terminated by carriage return and/or line feed.
o A new open option, "SYNC", has been added to the Portable Contiguous,
Portable Indexed-Contiguous, and text file drivers. This option forces
the operating system to write data immediately to disk. Example:
Open #1,"(sync)datafile"
This option will severely impact file throughput and should only be used
in special circumstances.
o A new option, "buffer=true", has been added to the text and pipe drivers
to improve performance. For compatibility with UniBasic, these drivers
normally output data immediately after a PRINT or WRITE statement. The
"buffer=true" option instructs the drivers to delay output until an
internal buffer is filled or the driver is closed. The option can be
used in an OPEN statement or in a printer script "# dl4opts=" line.
Examples:
BUILD #1,+"(buffer=true)textfile!"
# dl4opts=buffer=true
o Portable Indexed-Contiguous and Portable Contiguous file performance has
been improved for files opened in exclusive mode. Scratch files should
be opened using the EOPEN statement to obtain this increased performance.
o It is now possible to output binary zero characters to a terminal or
serial port when in binary output mode. The MAT WRITE statement will
output all characters including binary zero characters in a string
variable. Subscripts can be used to limit output to a selected range
within a string.
o A new BASIC command, XBREAK, has been implemented to allow the user
to set breakpoints outside of the current program. The command uses
the same syntax as the existing BREAK command, but will apply the
breakpoint to both the current program and to any program entered via
CHAIN, CALL subprogram, or SWAP statements. Example:
XBREAK 1000
XBREAK breakpoints can be deleted or listed with the normal NOBREAK
or STATUS BREAKPOINT commands.
o Enhancement: quoted values can now be used in driver options. For
example, a quoted value might be used to provide a subject line using
parentheses to the email driver:
Open #1,"(From=someone,Subject=''(test)'')somebody" As "Email"
o Behavior change: the DL4PORTDUMP and DL4STOPDUMP runtime parameters
have been enhanced to support an optional file protection ("")
specification.
o Behavior change: the LOADSAVE utility now prints a simple usage
message if the "-h" option is used. A full usage message can be
displayed by using the "-H" option.
o The PORT statement has been extended with a new mode, 6, to determine
whether a port is blocked by a record lock and which other port is
holding the needed record lock. The statement
PORT portnum,6,status,isblocked,blockingport
sets the variable "isblocked" to one if the dL4 program running on
port "portnum" has been waiting for over 20 seconds for a record lock
and to zero if it is not blocked. If the port is blocked by a record
lock, the variable "blockingport" is set to the port number of the
program that currently has the record locked or to -1 if the blocking
port number cannot be determined. PORT mode 6 is supported for record
locks on formatted, contiguous, and indexed contiguous files.
o The PORT statement has been extended with a new mode, 7, to return
the user name and work station name of a specified port. The statement
PORT portnum,7,status,userid$,station$
queries port "portnum" and returns in "userid$" the user name, if any,
associated with the port and returns in "station$" the terminal name,
if any, used by the port.
o The TERM utility has been extended to display the user name and work
station name associated with each port. If the program running on a
port is currently blocked by a record lock wait, its state will be
displayed as "Blkd" and the port number that is currently holding the
locked record will be displayed in parentheses. The "Blkd" state
information is supported only for record locks on formatted, contiguous,
and indexed contiguous files.
o The intrinsic CALLs GetGlobals() and SetGlobals() have been extended to
support separate named sets of global values. If the first parameter
of CALL GetGlobals() or CALL SetGlobals() is a string, it will be
treated as a global set name and the get or set operations will be
applied using that global set. The default set is named "". A
global set is created by the first CALL SetGlobals() using the set
name. Examples:
Call SetGlobals$("mylib",0,N$,A) ! set values in "mylib"
Call GetGlobals$("mylib",0,N$,A) ! get values from "mylib"
Call SetGlobals("mylib") ! delete the set "mylib"
o The intrinsic CALL table in the dL4 development kit, userproc.c, now
supports the option USERPROCOPT_CVTSTRINGS to automatically string
parameters to and from binary ITEMS using the UniBasic IRIS character
set. This option can be used to simplify conversion of CALLs from
UniBasic at the cost of some additional overhead. See the files
usercall/userproc.h and usercall/userproc.c in the development kit
for details.
o Bug fixed: the SPAWN statement sometimes failed when a program path
included embedded spaces.
o Bug fixed: printing to the auxiliary printer to the "Windows Terminal
Printer" driver sometimes produced garbled output.
o Bug fixed: when the main window was taller than the display window, the
frame around the display window was sometimes displayed incorrectly.
o Bug fixed: searching or reading backwards through an index in the MySQL
Full-ISAM driver skipped records that had keys beginning with NULL values.
o Bug fixed: the statement "ENTER ..." always generated an illegal word
error.
o Bug fixed: storing a value into a "%2" (32-bit integer) structure member
caused alignment violations on some systems (such as Sun SPARC systems).
o Bug fixed: the POS() function did not work correctly when a negative step
value was used with the "IS" or "EXCEPT" relational operators.
o Bug fixed: OPTION DIALECT IRIS1/BITS1/IMS did not allow values to be
returned in subscripted strings parameters of intrinsic CALLs or functions.
o Beta bug fixed: memory violations occurred if auto-increment columns or
null values were used in MySQL tables.
o Beta bug fixed: MySQL indexes were not recognized as case-insensitive.
o Bug fixed: when converting source files, functions in CALL arguments
were sometimes converted to variables.
o Bug fixed: binary output did not work on Windows 95/98/ME systems if
the printer used direct printing rather than spooling.
o Bug fixed: if a printer script used the "TRANSLATE=" option and did not
use the "PATH=" option, a "File not found" error sometimes caused a
memory violation.
o Beta bug fixed: colors were set incorrectly by 'FONTCOLOR' or 'BACKCOLOR'
when used in a GUI list box such as 'WCLIST'.
o Beta bug fixed: the final item in a GUI list box (such as 'WCLIST') was
sometimes displayed with an incorrect value whenever the list box items
were initialized.
o Beta bug fixed: hidden fields did not work in GUI list boxes such as
'WCLIST'.
o Bug fixed: opening the pipe driver with an AS clause sometimes resulted
in a syntax error.
o Bug fixed: a BUILD statement with an AS clause using "" or "AutoSelect",
caused a memory violation.
o Bug fixed: POS() expressions without relational operators were not
treated as syntax errors.
o Bug fixed: when using DynamicXport, HTML files with long lines (499
characters or more) did not work correctly.
o Bug fixed: when using DynamicXport, "dl4l()" references did not work
correctly if the list variable was empty.
o Bug fixed: if a WCGROUP with radio buttons was enclosed within another
WCGROUP, the first button would be placed in a separate radio group
apart from the other radio buttons.
Jan 6 2003 (Maintenance Release 5.1.5)
o A new environment variable, DXTESTCOPY, has been implemented for use
in debugging DynamicXport applications. When the DXTESTOUT environment
variable is defined, a "CALL DXCLOSE()" statement outputs the current
DynamicXport output table to the text file selected by DXTESTOUT. The
DXTESTCOPY value, if defined, selects which, if any, values from the
DynamicXport input table should be copied to that text file. If a
selected value exists in both the input and output tables, only the
output table value will be written to the text file. DXTESTCOPY is a
comma separated list of value names or value name prefixes as in the
optional CALL DXCOPY() or CALL DXMOVE() selection arrays. Examples:
To copy all input table variables with names beginning with "U_"
DXTESTCOPY=U_
export DXTESTCOPY
To copy all input table variables
DXTESTCOPY=+
export DXTESTCOPY
o Bug fixed: a memory violation sometimes occurred after an error 15,
"arithmetic overflow", was detected in the argument list of a user
defined function or procedure.
o Bug fixed: if a program executed a SWAP statement using CHAIN WRITE
statements, then any subsequent CHAIN or SWAP statement in the parent
program would not pass common ("COM 3%,N") variables.
o Bug fixed: when converting programs using the CONVERT command or the
LOADSAVE "-c" option, intrinsic functions in CALL parameters were
sometimes converted to array variable references.
o Bug fixed: POS() expressions without relational operators were not
treated as syntax errors.
o Bug fixed: if a WCGROUP with radio buttons was enclosed within another
WCGROUP, the first button would be placed in a separate radio group
apart from the other radio buttons.
o Bug fixed: binary output did not work on Windows 95/98/ME systems if
the printer used direct printing rather than spooling.
o Bug fixed: if a printer script used the "TRANSLATE=" option and did not
use the "PATH=" option, a "File not found" error sometimes caused a
memory violation.
o Bug fixed: opening the pipe driver with an AS clause sometimes resulted
in a syntax error.
o Bug fixed: a BUILD statement with an AS clause using "" or "AutoSelect",
caused a memory violation.
o Bug fixed: when using DynamicXport, HTML files with long lines (499
characters or more) did not work correctly.
o Bug fixed: when using DynamicXport, "dl4l()" references did not work
correctly if the list variable was empty.
o Bug fixed: the 'EPW' mnemonic could not be defined in terminal definition
files.
o Bug fixed: in SCOPEC.EXE and RUNC.EXE, an error 5 ("Illegal character")
occurred whenever the 'BCTRACK' ("Begin Cursor Tracking") mnemonic was
used and a window was open or the window system was active.
Sep 27 2002 (Maintenance Release 5.1.4)
o The intrinsic CALL FindF() now accepts an optional third argument, a
string variable, to receive the absolute path of a file if it exists.
Examples:
Call FindF(Filename$,Status)
Call FindF(Filename$,Status,ActualPathFound$)
o Two new intrinsic functions have been implemented to convert binary
variables to and from base-64 character strings. Example:
Declare Intrinsic Function Base64$, Base64?
String$ = Base64$(BinaryVariable?)
Binary? = Base64?(StringVariable$)
o Bug fixed: if a key in a SEARCH statement was specified with a
subscripted string variable ("SEARCH #1,3,1;K$[1,10],R,S") and a
key was successfully found, the new key value was not returned.
o Bug fixed: the "mixedcase" option in the LUMAP and DL4LUST runtime
parameters did not work and caused a syntax error.
o Bug fixed: using double directory separators ("abc//def") in a path
sometimes caused the MSC$(8xx) function to return an incorrect path.
Sep 6 2002 (Maintenance Release 5.1.3)
o Bug fixed: the 'CS' mnemonic and the WINDOW CLEAR statement cleared
GUI menu elements.
Sep 4 2002 (Maintenance Release 5.1.2)
o A new mnemonic, 'DEFAULTCOLOR', has been defined to set the default
colors to the current foreground and background colors for the rest
of the session.
o Enhancement: up to 128 GUI elements can now be queried at one time
using one or more WCQUERY mnemonics (previously only 32 elements
could be queried before reading the results).
o Bug fixed: 'WCLISTDROP' elements whose drop down boxes extended below
the bottom of the window could not be deleted by the 'CS' mnemonic.
o Bug fixed: the DIR utility reported an illegal subscript error when
it listed a FoxPro Full-ISAM file.
o Bug fixed: opening the pipe driver with an AS clause sometimes caused
a file syntax error.
Jul 19 2002 (Maintenance Release 5.1.1)
o Behavior change: CALL MEMCOPY() now allows copy sizes that exceed the
size of the destination variable if that variable is an element of a
larger array or structure variable and the size is within the size of
the surrounding variable. For example, it is possible to copy to
multiple elements of an array starting at a specific subscript.
o Behavior change: CALL IMSMEMCOPY() now prevents copying beyond the
limits of the destination variable. If the destination variable is an
array element or structure member, the limit is based on the entire
array or structure variable. For example, it is possible to copy to
multiple elements of an array starting at a specific subscript, but an
attempt to copy beyond the end of the array will cause an error 38.
o Bug fixed: dL4 5.1 could not be used with dynamicXport.
Jul 10 2002 (Release 5.1)
o A new runtime parameter, DL4LUST, has been implemented to provide a
UniBasic LUST-like search path for data files. Like LIBSTRING and
other dL4 path lists, DL4LUST is a space separated list of directories.
If DL4LUST is defined and a file is opened or created with a relative
path, dL4 will search each directory in the list and use the first
directory in which the file is found as the root directory of the file.
If the file is being created and the file does not exist in any of the
directories, then the file will be created using the first directory
in the list. If the runtime parameter DL4DEFLU is defined, then the
search will modified to try each of the directories in DL4LUST first
without and then with the value of DL4DEFLU appended.
Example:
Assume
DL4LUST is equal to ". /usr/data test"
DL4DEFLU is equal to "5"
the current directory is "/home/fred/"
then the statement
OPEN #1,"file"
would try to open "file" using the following paths and in the
following order:
./file
./5/file
/usr/data/file
/usr/data/5/file
/home/fred/test/file
/home/fred/test/5/file
The DL4LUST and LUMAP runtime parameters can both be defined and LUMAP
mapping will be used instead of DL4LUST if an LUMAP mapping is found.
In choosing between using DL4LUST and LUMAP, the UniBasic compatibility
of DL4LUST should be weighed against the higher efficiency of LUMAP.
In a networked file system environment, using LUMAP will avoid the high
overhead of multiple directory searches over the network.
o The LUMAP and DL4LUST runtime parameters can now accept filename
options to control the legal character set for filenames and paths. The
options are specified in parentheses at the beginning of the LUMAP or
DL4LUST parameter string. The following options are recognized:
"mixedcase" - do not convert the filename to lowercase (Unix) or
uppercase (Windows)
"unibasic" - limit the filename to letters, digits, "-", and
".". Ignore any character at and following an
illegal character.
"pfchar=x" - limit the filename as described for "unibasic"
but convert the first "@" character to "x" and
then ignore any following characters.
If both LUMAP and DL4LUST are used, only one parameter string to specify
the options or both strings must specify the same options. These options
have no effect on absolute paths which are always used as given.
o The LUMAP and DL4LUST runtime parameters can now accept a "case="
option to control case conversion in relative paths. By default, dL4
for Unix converts relative paths to lowercase Unix filenames when
creating or opening files. Similarly, it converts lowercase Unix
filenames to uppercase when CHF$(8xx) or other functions are used to
retrieve the filename open on a channel. The "case=" option is specified
in parentheses at the beginning of the LUMAP or DL4LUST parameter string.
The values "" and "" in the "case=" argument must be replaced by
the desired operating system ("") and user ("") case conversion:
"l" - Convert to lowercase
"u" - Convert to uppercase
"a" - Leave case unchanged
For example, an LUMAP value of "(case=la)" would perform the normal
conversion of relative filenames to lowercase when creating or opening
files, but it would always return the actual case of filenames in the
CHF$(8xx) function.
o The LUMAP and DL4LUST runtime parameters now support a "CHARSET=name"
option to select the file system character set under Unix. The
character set name must be either "ASCII", "US-ASCII", "ANSI",
"ISO 8859-1", or "Windows". Example:
LUMAP="(charset=ISO 8859-1)" export LUMAP
The option can be set with or without setting a path mapping or search
list.
o The UniBasic utilities listed below have been converted to dL4.
These are essentially the original UniBasic utilities loaded into
dL4 using conversion profiles. The user interface and functionality
are identical to that of the original UniBasic utilities.
batch Execute commands on a phantom port
bitsdir List directory contents
change Change filename or attributes
copy Copy files
dokey Access or modify Indexed-Contiguous files
format Create Formatted files
keymaint Access or modify Indexed-Contiguous files
libr List directory contents
make Create files
makecmnd Generate command files for BATCH or EXEC
mfdel Delete files
port Display port status or evict ports (the "term" utility
is a native dL4 program that offers similar functions
and extended dL4 options)
scan Display file information
who Display user information
o The following intrinsic calls have been added for UniBasic compatibility:
UniBasic CALL New equivalent dL4 Intrinsic
CALL $ATOE Call AToE()
CALL $CKSUM Call Cksum()
CALL $CLU Call CLU()
CALL $DATE Call Date()
CALL $DEVOPEN Call DevOpen()
CALL $DEVCLOSE Call DevClose()
CALL $DEVREAD Call DevRead()
CALL $DEVWRITE Call DevWrite()
CALL $DEVPRINT Call DevPrint()
CALL $ETOA Call EToA()
CALL $LOCK Call Lock()
CALL $MEMCMP Call MemCmp()
CALL $RDFHD (97) Call Rdfhd()
CALL $VOLLINK (91) Call VolLink()
CALL 1 Call StrSrch1()
CALL 5 Call MemCopy()
CALL 7 Call SetEcho()
CALL 15 Call PkUnPkDec()
CALL 18 Call PkRdx5018()
CALL 19 Call UnPkRdx5019()
CALL 20 Call PkDec20()
CALL 21 Call UnPkDec21()
CALL 29 Call EditField()
CALL 30 Call CopyStr()
CALL 40 Call InitErrMsg()
CALL 44 Call StrSrch44()
CALL 45 Call PkDec45()
CALL 46 Call UnPkDec46()
CALL 47 Call Misc47()
CALL 48 Call PkRdx5048()
CALL 49 Call UnPkRdx5049()
CALL 53 Call ASC2EBCDIC()
CALL 57 Call ClearStr()
CALL 72 Call Gather()
CALL 73 Call Scatter()
CALL 81 Call StrSrch81()
CALL 95 Call IRISOS95()
CALL 116 Call CloseAll()
CALL 117 Call AvailBlks()
CALL 118 Call NextAvPort()
CALL 127 Call FileInfo()
In order to use these intrinsic CALLs, a DECLARE INTRINSIC SUB statement
must be used to declare the intrinsic SUB. A DECLARE statement will be
added automatically when programs are converted using a conversion
profile.
o UniBasic CALL $MONITOR has been added to tools/oldcalls.lib, a dL4
library. This is a partial implementation that does not support
returning the full list of open channels. The implementation is
sufficient to support user status displays and it is used by the
converted UniBasic PORT utility in the tools/ directory.
o A new intrinsic function, ErrMsg$(), has been implemented to replace
references to the UniBasic ERM() function. The ErrMsg$() function is
used with CALL InitErrMsg() to replace the error message facility
provided by UniBasic ERM() function and CALL 40. The standard conversion
profile will convert ERM() function usage to ErrMsg$() and add the
required DECLARE INTRINSIC FUNCTION statement.
o A new intrinsic function, UBMem(), has been implemented to satisfy
references to the UniBasic MEM() function. Like the UniBasic MEM()
function, UBMem() always returns zero. The standard conversion profile
will convert MEM() function usage to UBMem() and add the required
DECLARE INTRINSIC FUNCTION statement.
o The intrinsic CALL BitsNumStr() has been extended to accept string
variables as well as binary variables as arguments. This enhancement
makes the BitsNumStr() compatible with UniBasic CALL 2.
o A new utility, dl4servr.exe, is now included with dL4 for Windows. This
utility installs and implements a service to connect dL4 programs with
incoming network TCP connections on a specified IP address and port
number. This function is similar to that of "inetd" on Unix systems.
The utility is a command line program with the following command line
syntax:
dl4servr install servicename address port command options
dl4servr remove servicename
dl4servr help
The format "dl4servr install servicename address port command options"
installs the dL4Servr service using "servicename" as the service name,
listening to the TCP "address" and "port", and running "command" whenever
a TCP connection is received. A typical value of "command" would be
"C:\Progra~1\dl4\runc.exe C:\AppDir\app.dl4" where app.dl4 is a dL4
program to run with standard input and output assigned to the incoming
TCP socket connection. The following options are accepted:
/d directory initial current directory used by "command"
/e envvars environment variable settings for "command" using
the format "name=value" and comma separators
between settings
/u username user name for the account running the service
/p password password for the account running the service
The current path of dl4servr.exe is used as the installation location.
The service will be started whenever the system is rebooted or the
command "net start servicename" is executed.
The format "dl4servr remove servicename" removes the dl4servr service
named "servicename"
The format "dl4servr help" displays help text
o The 'n,m WCENABLE' and 'n,m WCDISABLE' mnemonics can now be used to
enable or disable all GUI elements between "n" and "m" inclusive.
o A new mnemonic, 'RESETFONT', has been defined to restore the default
screen or printer font name and size.
o A horizontal scroll bar is now automatically displayed by WCLIST
boxes if the list elements are too wide for the list box.
o The Windows Page Printer driver now tries to match the requested line
height even when the system printer driver cannot provide the requested
font height.
o The Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver can now be opened with an
"AS" clause using the name "MSSQL Full-ISAM" or "SQL Full-ISAM". The
driver name "SQL Full-ISAM" selects the preferred SQL Full-ISAM
driver which, in a custom configuration, may or may not be the Microsoft
SQL Server driver.
o A new option, "OPTION DEFAULT ARGUMENT CHECKING IS WEAK", has been
added to support passing array variables to subprograms (CALL by
filename) without using the empty bracket notation ('CALL "pgm",A[]').
This option improves compatibility with IMS BASIC.
o A new optional setting has been defined for conversion profiles to
convert references to undefined user functions ("FNx"). Without this
option, undefined functions are treated as compile time errors and the
program cannot be executed until the error is corrected. When enabled,
the option adds definitions for each undefined function to the end of
the program. The functions will generate an error 30 if used. Using
the option the following program
10 Def Fna(x) = x + 5
20 Print Fna(3) + Fnb(4)
would be converted to
1 Declare Function Fnb, Fnc
10 Def Fna(X) = X + 5
20 Print Fna(3) + Fnb(4) + Fnc(8)
1000 ! Dummy functions inserted for referenced, but undefined, functions
1001 External Function UndefinedFunctionError()
1002 Error 30
1003 End Function 0
1004 Def Fnb(X) = UndefinedFunctionError()
1005 Def Fnc(X) = UndefinedFunctionError()
The line numbers used by the inserted lines are always greater than
any line number used in the program.
The option is enabled by adding a "ConvertUndefinedFunctions=True"
line in the conversion profile settings section. Example:
[Settings]
ConvertUndefinedFunctions=True
o A new intrinsic CALL, IMSMEMCOPY(), has been implemented to provide
compatibility with CALL 90 in IMS BASIC. The syntax of CALL IMSMEMCOPY()
is:
Call IMSMemCopy(Destination, Source, ByteCount)
where "Destination" is a variable of any type, "Source" is a variable
of any type, and "ByteCount" is a numeric variable or expression. The
CALL copies "ByteCount" bytes from the "Source" variable to the
"Destination" Variable. If both "Destination" and "Source" are string
variables or arrays, then "ByteCount" characters are copied. This CALL
is dangerous and will corrupt memory if "ByteCount" exceeds the size of
the destination variable. This is allowed so that "Destination" variable
can be a subscripted array element identifying the start of a copy range.
o A new intrinsic CALL, CHSTAT(), has been implemented to return current
SWAP level information. The BASIC syntax of the CALL has several
possible parameter lists:
Call ChStat(SwapLevel, ParentLineNum, ParentName$)
Call ChStat(SwapLevel, ParentName$, ParentLineNum)
Call ChStat(SwapLevel, ParentName$)
Call ChStat(ParentName$, SwapLevel, ParentLineNum)
Call ChStat(ParentName$, SwapLevel)
Call ChStat(ParentName$)
Call ChStat(SwapLevel, ParentLineNum)
Call ChStat(SwapLevel)
where "SwapLevel" receives the current SWAP level number (zero if
there are no SWAPs in progress), "ParentLineNum" receives the line
number of the SWAP statement in the parent program (zero if none), and
"ParentName$" receives the name of the parent program ("" if none).
o A new intrinsic CALL, CALLSTAT(), has been implemented to return current
CALL-by-filename level information. The BASIC syntax of the CALL has
several possible parameter lists:
Call CallStat(CallLevel, ParentLineNum, ParentName$)
Call CallStat(CallLevel, ParentName$, ParentLineNum)
Call CallStat(CallLevel, ParentName$)
Call CallStat(ParentName$, CallLevel, ParentLineNum)
Call CallStat(ParentName$, CallLevel)
Call CallStat(ParentName$)
Call CallStat(CallLevel, ParentLineNum)
Call CallStat(CallLevel)
where "CallLevel" receives the current CALL-by-filename level number
(zero if there are no CALLs-by-filename in progress), "ParentLineNum"
receives the line number of the CALL statement in the parent program
(zero if none), and "ParentName$" receives the name of the parent
program ("" if none).
o A new intrinsic function, CRC16(), has been implemented to calculate
16 bit CRC values. BASIC syntax:
x = CRC16(mode, polynomial, string, oldcrc)
where:
"mode = 0" - calculate 8-bit sum of lower 8 bits of each character
"mode = 1" - calculate CRC using lower 8 bits of each character
An XMODEM compatible CRC can be calculated using mode one, a
polynomial value of 4129 (0x1021), and an initial CRC of zero.
o A new statement, CHAIN READ IF, has been added to perform a CHAIN READ
of specified variables, but without reporting an error if any of the
variables weren't passed by CHAIN WRITE statements. Example:
CHAIN READ IF SubTotal, Filename$
o A new option, "OPTION DIALECT IMS", has implemented to select IMS BASIC
compatible behavior. That behavior is identical to "OPTION DIALECT IRIS1"
except for USING mask behavior where a positive value is allowed to use
all characters for digits. For example, the mask "--#.##" normally
would generate an overflow result for 123.45, but outputs "123.45" with
"OPTION DIALECT IMS".
o Behavior change: "OPTION DIALECT IRIS1", "OPTION DIALECT BITS1", and
"OPTION DIALECT IMS" now allow intrinsic CALLs and functions to return
values in parameters even when the parameter is a subscripted string.
This change improves compatibility with UniBasic and IMS BASIC.
o The "Data=XXX" open option to set serial line character size, parity,
and stop bits has been extended to accept a question mark ("?") in
place of the character size, parity, or number of stop bits. If "?"
is used, then the existing value of that parameter will be left
unchanged. Thus the option "Data=8?1" sets the character size to
eight bits and the number of stop bits to one, but leaves the parity
option unchanged. A new parity option, "P", has been defined to
enable parity using the current even or odd parity setting.
o To support conversion of IMS BASIC indexed contiguous files, a key
translation feature has been added to dL4 Portable/Universal indexed
contiguous files. The feature supports translating two digit years
between "00" and "39" in keys to the values "An" through "Dn". This
translation causes the keys for years 2000 - 2039 to be sorted
correctly. An application using the file will only see numeric dates.
The translation is defined for a file by using the statement
Set #chan,-599;IndexNum,MapNum,Offset,Size
where "IndexNum" is the index containing the keys to be translated,
"MapNum" is the mapping function number (only function zero is
supported), "Offset" is the zero based byte offset of the year in the
key, and "Size" is the length of the key field in characters. The
translation definition is stored in the file header and will be used by
any subsequent open of the file. Key translation can be disabled on an
open file by the statement "Set #chan,-599,0;" and re-enabled by the
statement "Set #chan,-599,1;". The dL4 QUERY utility (tools/query) has
been extended to display the translation option, if any, used by an index.
o A new runtime parameter, "MINPORT", has been defined to set the
minimum port number to be used when automatically generating a port
number.
o A new option, "-k seconds", has been added to the "run" utility to
specify a socket "keepalive" timeout period for the standard input
channel. This option can be used when using "run" to execute dL4
programs connected to a socket. The timeout option causes an error
when reading from the socket if the remote system crashes, is
rebooted, or loses its network connection.
o The statement "GET #c,-399;S$" can be used to retrieve the index
character set from an indexed contiguous or Full-ISAM file.
o The terminal type number of the dL4Term character window terminal
definition ("term/dl4term.chwin") has been changed to 409 to distinguish
it from the standard dL4Term terminal definition (which uses 410).
The number of lines has been changed to 25 (the default value for
dL4Term). The number of columns is now updated when a 'NR' or 'WD'
mnemonic is processed.
o A new function, CHR?(n), has been implemented to convert numbers to
binary variable bytes.
o An error is now reported if a READ or RDLOCK statement contains
a constant or expression in the argument list. For example, the
statement 'READ #5;"abcdef"' is no longer legal.
o Semicolons are now converted to commas in MAT WRITE statements when
converting programs.
o The raw file driver has been extended to write an entire string value,
including zero bytes or characters, when a MAT WRITE statement is used.
o A new MSC$() function, MSC$(-2), has been implemented to returned the
dL4 revision number in the format RRLLBBSS. Another new MSC$() function,
MSC$(-3), has been implemented to return the dL4 revision string.
o The "run" and "loadsave" utilities now accept a "-V" option to print
the dL4 revision and exit.
o RmvSpaces(), WhoLock(), and the DynamicXport CALLs used in UniBasic have
been added to the standard conversion profiles ("tools/convert.prf" and
"tools/convbits.prf").
o The "Serial Terminal" and "Terminal Window" drivers now support output
of zero bytes in binary output mode.
o A new channel function, CHF(1500 + c), has been implemented to return
the number of characters read by the last I/O operation. This channel
function can be used when performing binary input from serial ports
or sockets.
o The intrinsic CALLs SETGLOBALS() and GETGLOBALS() now support up to
1000 items (the previous default limit was 30).
o A new MEMBER statement option has been added to specify variable
length fields. The VARLEN option can be used with FoxPro Full-ISAM
files to create memo fields instead of fixed length character fields.
Example:
Def Struct REC
Member Name$[32] : Item "Name"
Member 3%,Price : Item "Price"
Member Comment$[100] : Item "Comment" : Varlen
End Def
The QUERY utility in the Tools/ directory displays variable length
fields with a "V" attribute.
o The DUPLICATE, KILL, and MODIFY statements now accept an option AS
clause to specify the driver name or class. The AS clause is used
with drivers that cannot be autoselected such as future SQL drivers.
o The TERM utility in the Tools/ directory now has a DUMP option to
request a program dump on a specified port. The DUMP option can only
be used if the specified port has the DL4PORTDUMP environment variable
defined to specify the dump file location. Example:
#term 5 dump
o The CHECKSUM utility in the Tools/ directory now has a "-c checksum"
option to calculate a file checksum and compare the result to an
expected value.
o The QUERY utility in the Tools directory now displays the creation,
last accessed, and last modified date/times of the specified file
if those values are available. Because Unix does not maintain a
creation date, the displayed creation date/time will simply be the
earliest of the record date/time values.
o Behavior change: the maximum repeat count for a character (such as
'n PI') is now limited to 32767 to avoid runaway printing.
o The translation of strings when reading from or writing to UniBasic or
Universal files has been changed to support intrinsic CALLs that pack
into or unpack data from strings. The new translation effects non-ASCII
values which were previously translated to dL4 mnemonic codes. The new
method translates any character in the mnemonic range to a special
Unicode range of 0xf780 to 0xf7ff. This translation preserves the
eight bit value of the translated characters allowing intrinsic packing
CALLs to simply ignore the upper eight bits of the Unicode character.
If characters in this special range are printed to a terminal or
printer driver, the characters will be translated to actual dL4 mnemonic
codes at output time. When writing to a UniBasic or Universal file,
the special translation range, the standard dL4 mnemonics, and any
Unicode character between 0x0080 and 0x00ff will all be translated to
mnemonic character values.
The purpose of this change is to ease conversion from UniBasic to dL4 by
allowing access to files that contain packed data. The change will not
be visible to existing dL4 applications if they simply read mnemonic
values from file and print the values to a terminal, a printer, or
another file. The change will be visible if the application examines
the actual character values. For example, if an application reads
mnemonic strings from a file and then compares the characters to dL4
mnemonics ('IF A$[I,I] = 'CS'), the characters will never be equal to
the expected mnemonic characters. If your existing dL4 application
depends on this type of behavior, please contact Dynamic Concepts.
o The conversion profile format has been extended to automatically append
"[]" to intrinsic CALL array parameters when a program is converted.
For each intrinsic CALL that has array parameters, a prototype
parameter list must be added to the conversion profile. For example,
the following entry in the "[Intrinsic]" section of the standard
tools/convert.prf file specifies that the second and the optional
fifth parameters are arrays:
FileInfo=127(Dir$,Info[],Filename$,Mode,DirInfo[])
Note that "[]" has been placed after each array parameter to inform
dL4 that brackets should be added to these parameters during conversion.
Using this information, the line
CALL 127,D$,A,A$,1,T
would be converted to
Call FileInfo(D$,A[],A$,1,T[])
In this release, the types and names of the parameters in the conversion
profile are not used during conversion and they do not need to match
actual usage.
o A new optional section, "[CallByFilename]", has been added to conversion
profiles to append "[]" to each array parameter in a CALL-by-filename
or in the ENTER statements of a subprogram that uses array parameters.
This feature is used to convert from IMS BASIC and it is not needed
when converting from UniBasic, IRIS, or BITS BASIC. For each subprogram
that uses array parameters, an entry as shown below should be added to
the "[CallByFilename]" section:
[CallByFilename]"
PrintReport="PrintReport"(A,B,C[],D)
The example above would add "[]" to the third parameter of
CALL "PrintReport" statement in each converted program. It would also
add "[]" to the third parameter of the ENTER statement in "PrintReport"
when converting that subprogram. The quoted filename in the conversion
profile is case insensitive, but it must otherwise match the filename
used in CALL statements. Synonyms may be added after the first filename
for alternative forms. Example:
PrintReport="PrintReport"(A,B,C[],D),"1/PrintReport"
o When converting programs using "LOADSAVE -C" or the SCOPE CONVERT
command, DECLARE statements are now added for DEF FN functions that
are used prior to their declaration. The inserted DECLARE statements
eliminates compile time errors that would otherwise be reported and
allows the converted program to run.
o When converting programs using "LOADSAVE -C" or the SCOPE CONVERT
command, "CHF(e)" functions will be converted to "CHF$(e)" if "e"
contains a constant between 800 and 899.
o A new boolean parameter, "ConvertCHF800To1300", has been added to
the "[Settings]" section of the conversion profile. If set to "TRUE",
"CHF(8xx)" function calls in the source program will be converted to
"CHF$(13xx)" function calls which return the native absolute path.
o A new optional setting has been defined for conversion profiles to
convert references to undefined line numbers to labels and then
add labeled statements at the end of the program. Using this
option the following program
10 Print "Hello" \ Goto 30
20 Goto 1000
30 Print " world"
would be converted to
10 Print "Hello" \ Goto 30
20 Goto U01000
30 Print " world"
1000 End ! Labels inserted for non-existent lines/labels
1001 U01000: Error 6
The line numbers used by the inserted labels are always greater than
any line number used in the program.
The option is enabled by adding a "ConvertUndefinedLineRefs=True"
line in the conversion profile settings section. Example:
[Settings]
ConvertUndefinedLineRefs=True
o A new optional setting has been defined for conversion profiles to
renumber programs when they are converted. This option can be used
when converting programs that need to have DECLARE INTRINSIC SUB and
other statements inserted prior to the first line of program, but the
first line has a line number of one. The following example would
renumber a converted program to start at line 100 and increment by
10 for all following lines:
[Settings]
Renumber=100,10
o A new optional setting has been defined for conversion profiles to
report each occurrence of a undefined intrinsic CALL as an error.
[Settings]
ReportUndefProcs=True
o If "Language=BITS" is specified in the "[Settings]" section of the
conversion profile, "IF ERR 0" statements will be converted to
"IF ERR(0)" statements.
o If "Language=BITS" is specified in the "[Settings]" section of the
conversion profile, "CHR(x)" will be converted to "CHR$(x)" in converted
programs.
o A new optional section, "[Edit]", has been added to conversion profiles
to support user defined source editing that will be applied to each
source line when a program source file is converted. The feature is
available from both the LOADSAVE "-c profile" option and the SCOPE
CONVERT command. The entries in the "[Edit]" section consist of pairs
of lines where the first line defines what is to be replaced and the
second line defines the new text. For example, if a conversion profile
included the lines
[Edit]
OldText=Hello
New=GoodBye
then each occurrence of "Hello" in a source line would be replaced with
"GoodBye". The keyword in the first line defines how the search will
be performed:
OldText= finds and replaces each exact match of the specified text
OldTextCI= finds and replaces each case-insensitive match of the
specified text
OldTokens= finds and replaces each matching token string ignoring
case and whitespace. It will NOT change text in string
literals, mnemonic literals, DATA statements, or
comments. A number in the text will match any equivalent
numeric value ("1.3 will match with "1.30"). Because
case and whitespace are ignored, the text "A + B" would
match "a + b", "A+B", "A+b", and several other forms.
Because this a token oriented search, "A + B" would not
match "A + B1".
OldString= finds and replaces each exact match of the specified text
within a string literal ("abc") other than those in DATA
statements
OldMnemonic= finds and replaces each case-insensitive match of the
specified text within a mnemonic literal ('CS BD')
OldData= finds and replaces each exact match of the specified text
in a DATA statement
OldComment= finds and replaces each exact match of the specified text
in a comment (! or REM)
The keyword value is case insensitive in both the "old" and "new" lines.
Example:
[Edit]
oldtokens=@0,23;
new=@0,Msc(34);
o A new option, "-w", has been added to the LOADSAVE utility to enable
warning messages for non-fatal errors. In this release, warning
messages are produced for string variables without corresponding DIM
statements.
o A new option, "-L", has been added to the LOADSAVE utility to convert
all line number references to labels. Each generated label has the
form "Lnnn" where "nnn" is the original line number.
o The SCOPE CONVERT command and the LOADSAVE "-c" convert option will now
convert DATA statements by making each DATA value a quoted string. The
READ statement has been enhanced to allow READing a DATA string value
into a numeric value.
o Conversion of DATA statements in IMS BASIC programs has been improved
to accept end of line comments. This feature requires using a conversion
profile with a "Language=IMS" setting.
o The SCOPE CONVERT command and the LOADSAVE "-c" convert option will now
accept PEEK, POKE, SECTOR, and TAPE statements, which do nothing in
UniBasic, and convert the statements to
PAUSE NOT("Original statement text")
which does nothing in dL4.
o The SCOPE CONVERT command and the LOADSAVE "-c" convert option will now
accept and convert semicolons used instead of commas in READ or WRITE
statements. For example, the line
10 READ #1,R;A,B;C,D;
is converted to
10 Read #1,R;A,B,C,D;
o The SCOPE CONVERT command and the LOADSAVE "-c" convert option will now
convert extra statements after an IF ERR 0 statement to comments. This
produces behavior similar to UniBasic where extra statements are
ignored and never executed. For example, the line
IF ERR 0 LET N = 1 \ PRINT "Hello"
is converted to
IF ERR 0 LET N = 1 ! PRINT "Hello"
This conversion is not applied if the conversion language is IMS.
o A new runtime parameter, DL4DRIVERS, has been defined to configure dL4
driver selection. There are currently two DL4DRIVERS options, "Universal"
and "ANSI Text". Setting DL4DRIVERS to "Universal" causes dL4 to create
Universal Indexed-Contiguous or Formatted files by default instead of
Portable Indexed-Contiguous or Formatted files. This can be useful if
the files need to accessed by UniBasic or if mnemonics are to be stored
in the files (note that only UniBasic supported mnemonics can be stored
in Universal files). Setting DL4DRIVERS to "ANSI Text" causes dL4 to
create and read text files using the ANSI (ISO 8859-1) character set
instead of the UniBasic character set. Options in the DL4DRIVERS
parameter are case-insensitive and multiple options can be separated
by commas. Examples:
DL4DRIVERS="Universal"
DL4DRIVERS="universal,ansi text"
o A new option, "-O filename", has been added to LOADSAVE to produce
an output file even if errors are detected during compilation. The
option must be used instead of the standard "-o filename" option and
produces a program file that can be loaded in SCOPE, but which cannot
be executed until the errors are corrected. This option is equivalent
to the SCOPE SAVE command that saves a program after reporting any
detected errors.
o The pipe driver has been extended to allow using both the TRANSLATE=
and OPENAS= options in the same printer script. This supports
scripts that use translation with the Windows Page Printer driver to
implement user defined mnemonics such as 'SA' or 'SB'. The printer
description file must be setup to perform a Unicode-to-Unicode
translation using a "UnicodeDevice=True" entry in the "[Settings]"
section. Since the output is being sent to a dL4 driver and not a
physical device, macro definitions must output Unicode characters and
dL4 Unicode mnemonic values.
Example:
rem dL4opts=translate=C:\progra~1\dl4\printer\dl4printer.prf
rem dL4opts=openas=selected page printer
rem dL4opts=lpi=8,cpi=10,hmargin=36,vmargin=36
The TRANSLATE= option must occur before the OPENAS= option.
o A new driver, "Sorted Directory", is now available to provide a
sorted directory listing. The driver is otherwise identical to the
normal directory driver. The driver is used by opening a directory
with an AS clause. Example:
Rem List the current directory contents in sorted order
Dim F$[255]
Open #1,"." As "Sorted Directory"
Do
Read#1;F$
If F$ = "" Exit Do
Print F$
Loop
Close #1
o To increase compatibility with UniBasic, the following SPC() and MSC()
functions have been added or changed:
SPC(4) returns -1 or the value of the SPC4 runtime parameter
SPC(264) returns -1 or the value of the SPC264 runtime parameter
SPC(272) returns -1 or the value of the SPC272 runtime parameter
MSC(2) returns -1 or the value of the SPC4 runtime parameter
(MSC(2) is equivalent to SPC(4))
MSC$(-1) returns "" or the value of the SPC4 runtime parameter
formatted as "RLLBBSS".
MSC$(264) returns ""
ERR(8) returns -1
o The SCOPE CHECK command has been enhanced to produce warning messages
for string variables without DIM statements. The test only determines
if a DIM statement exists for each string variable - it does NOT
determine if the DIM statement will be executed prior to the first
use of the string variable.
o Behavior change: the LIBSTRING runtime parameter, if defined, is
now used when finding a program filename specified on the "runc.exe"
or "runw.exe" command line.
o Behavior change: the error output format of LOADSAVE has been
changed slightly to support the UniBasic to dL4 conversion package.
o Behavior change: mode 3 of the PORT statement now supports the "Input
ready" flag value of 32768 to indicate that the port is waiting for
input.
o A new mnemonic, 'ET', has been defined for UniBasic compatibility.
The effect of using the mnemonic is dependent on the terminal
definition file.
o The POS() string search function has been extended to allow searching
for a character that is or is not part of a specified set of characters.
The expression "POS(S$, IS T$)" will search for the first character in
the string S$ that matches a character in the string T$. The expression
"POS(S$, EXCEPT T$)" will search for the first character in the string
S$ that does not match a character in the string T$. These new search
types can be combined with the optional step and occurrence options of
the POS() function.
o Limited support for polyfiles, similar to that of UniBasic, has been
implemented to set key lengths in bytes rather than 16-bit words, set
the first record number to zero, and return key lengths in bytes.
Polyfile status can be set in an indexed contiguous file by creating
the file with the "" attribute or using the intrinsic CALL VOLLINK().
o An input mode has been added to defer keyboard input after a GUI event
has been reported. This prevents the user from entering data into the
wrong GUI element (such as a 'WCSTRING' edit box) because the
application hasn't had time to select the proper new GUI element. The
defer mode is activated by printing a '1 WCEVENT' mnemonic string. Any
GUI event that returns an action string to the application will cause
keyboard input to be stored in an internal queue until the application
prints a 'WCFOCUS' or 'BEGIN' mnemonic to set the input focus. After
the focus is set, the queued keyboard input will be released to the
selected GUI element until another GUI event occurs.
Once selected by a '1 WCEVENT' mnemonic string, the deferred input mode
applies to all windows and all input until a '0 WCEVENT' mnemonic
string is printed. The current deferred input queue can be cleared
by using a '2 WCEVENT' mnemonic string.
o Behavior change: the 'LK' and 'UK' mnemonics can now be output to a
window if the mnemonics are defined in the terminal definition file.
o Behavior change: mnemonics in a window title will be ignored rather
causing an "illegal character" error.
o The 'AE', 'AD', 'BO', 'EO', 'BA', and 'EA' mnemonics have been added
to the standard terminal definition files for terminals that support
auxiliary printers.
o Behavior change: the SCOPE LIST and SHOW command will now default to
using "-v" paging behavior unless they are used in an EXEC command
script.
o Behavior change: the CHF(c) function will return a record count of
zero for newly created portable files instead of one.
o A leading numeric expression can now be used in a string concatenation
expression that uses commas. For example, the statement
10 A$ = Spc(8),"at",Spc(10)
is now legal.
o A leading date expression can now be used in a string concatenation
expression that uses commas. For example, the statement
10 A$ = Tim#(0)," is the current date and time"
is now legal.
o Input cursor tracking is now supported with the new 'BTRACK' mnemonic.
This feature is similar to UniBasic cursor tracking except that is
enabled by outputting the 'BTRACK' mnemonic rather than an octal "\001\".
The LOADSAVE "-c" and SCOPE CONVERT command will convert statements
such as
INPUT "\001\";A$
to
INPUT 'BTRACK';A$
If a converted application uses PRINT statements to enable cursor
tracking, the PRINT statements must be manually converted.
o A new option, "STRINGS HAGEN", has been added to provide compatibility
with UniBasic HAGEN string mode. Example:
OPTION DEFAULT STRINGS HAGEN
o A new option, "ZERO DIVIDED BY ZERO IS LEGAL", has been added to make
zero divided by zero equal to zero rather than causing an arithmetic
overflow error. This option is also enabled by the "DIALECT IRIS1"
and "DIALECT BITS1" options. Example:
10 Option Default Zero Divided By Zero Is Legal
20 Print 0 / 0
o A new option, "DIALECT IRIS1", has been added to provide a higher
degree of BITS compatibility than "DIALECT IRIS". The new option
enables the "ZERO DIVIDED BY ZERO" option in addition to the other
"DIALECT IRIS" options.
o A new option, "DIALECT BITS1", has been added to provide a higher
degree of BITS compatibility than "DIALECT BITS". The new option
enables the "DIALECT BITS" options and also enables BITS style FOR/NEXT
final value behavior, BITS USING mask features, and an initial precision
of 4%.
o A new option, 'PROGRAM TAG "text"' has been added place user defined
text in a program file as ASCII text. This option can be used to
add revision text strings to be printed by the Unix "what" utility.
Example:
OPTION PROGRAM TAG "@(#) Test program 1.3"
o A new driver, "ANSI Text", has been added to create and access text files
that uses the ANSI character set. Using the driver is equivalent to
opening a text file with the "charset=ansi" option.
o When the setting "IsUnicodeDevice" is TRUE in a terminal or printer
definition file, all characters and mnemonics will be passed unchanged
unless a macro definition exists for the character or mnemonic. In
previous versions, a macro definition was required for every character
or mnemonic,
o If an OPEN statement uses a "$" (output pipe) or "$$" (input pipe)
filename to open a script, then the name of the current program will
be passed to the script in the environment variable "DL4PROGRAM". The
script can then use the program name to control printer spooling or
special handling.
o A new runtime parameter, "AVAILREC", can be used to specify the value
returned by SEARCH as the number the records available in indexed
contiguous files. If the "AVAILREC" parameter is not set, the SEARCH
statement will return, as it did in previous dL4 releases, the actual
number of records available from the file free list or a minimum value
of one.
o A new runtime parameter, DL4STOPDUMP, has been implemented to control
whether a program dump should be written when a program exits via a
STOP statement. If the environment variable DL4STOPDUMP is defined
as an absolute path, then any program that exits via a STOP will cause
a program dump file to be written to the path. The path can use the
macro variables and other features of the DL4PORTDUMP runtime parameter.
o Behavior change: the terminal type number return by SPC(13) and MSC(32)
for dL4Term is now 410 rather than zero. This value can be changed in
the dL4Term terminal definition file (term/dl4term).
o The terminal type number returned by SPC(13) and MSC(32) for dL4 for
Windows can now be configured by the setting the DWORD registry
value "TermType" in:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\TermType
or
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\TermType
o The run utility now returns an "unsuccessful" exit status to the operating
system if a program exits with a STOP statement.
o A new setting, "StaleReadAllowed=True", is now supported in the file
section of a bridge profile. This setting enables re-reading the
current record data after the record has been unlocked. Use of this
setting is not recommended because the actual data record may have been
changed and the old data will be used for any re-read operations. This
feature is provided for compatibility with programs that performed such
reads on Indexed-Contiguous files and already suffered from potential
inconsistent data.
o When used with DynamicXport, dL4 now supports using "dl4l()" or "dl4t()"
references within "dl4c(For)" structures in template files. The "dl4c"
format has been extended to supported the format "dl4c(For,)" and
"dl4c(For,=)" to allow "dl4v()" references to the
current array index number.
o Bug fixed: WCLIST boxes did not work correctly with hidden fields
(option value 16) or empty list items.
o Bug fixed: programs using unary operators such as "-" were always forced
to the latest program object revision and could not be run by earlier
versions of dL4.
o Bug fixed: mismatched variable lists in CHAIN WRITE and CHAIN READ
statements in SWAP programs caused the child program to silently exit
instead of reporting an error to the parent program.
o Bug fixed: the 'ML', 'MR', 'MD', and 'MU' keys are accepted in cursor
tracking mode even if they are defined as illegal keys for normal
input mode. Any mnemonic character will be accepted in Activate-On-
Mnemonic mode.
o Bug fixed: the SEARCH and GET statements could corrupt the memory image
of a program if string literals were used as arguments.
o Bug fixed: the characters 'SI' ("\017\") and 'FS' ("\034\") could not be
printed to a dL4Term auxiliary printer.
o Bug fixed: the conversion profile text edit feature (the "[Edit]"
section) could not change the first symbol on a line.
o Bug fixed: expressions in a MAT WRITE or MAT WRLOCK statement argument
list caused an "Unrecognizable word: 12291" error when SAVEing the
program.
o Bug fixed: breakpoints set in the debugger for the current program
unit were ignored.
o Bug fixed: the QUERY utility reported UniBasic "Q" files as using "Mixed"
numerics rather than IRIS numerics.
o Bug fixed: the LIBR utility failed with an error message if a FoxPro
Full-ISAM file was encountered in the listed directory.
o Bug fixed: SWAP keys were not processed until the end of an INPUT
preventing the SWAP program from reading the characters immediately
following the SWAP key.
o Bug fixed: the DynamicXport DxGet() CALL and function did not return
the correct character values for 'FX' or 'FM' mnemonics.
o Bug fixed: the "Printer->Preferences" dialog overwrote some printer
parameters that are configurable only via the registry editor.
o Bug fixed: closing a child window reported a GUI event to the parent
window if the current parent window GUI element had the queue-on-loss-
of-focus option set.
o Bug fixed: functions keys were not passed from GUI elements to the
parent window on Windows 95, 98, or ME.
o Bug fixed: when converting OPEN statements in IMS programs, statements
with multiple channel numbers did not accept more than one file after
the second channel number.
o Bug fixed: using a conversion profile to convert a function to a
different result type (such as "ERM()" to "ERRMSG$()") caused a runtime
error when the function was used.
o Bug fixed: syntax errors in a conversion profile sometimes caused
memory violations in LOADSAVE or while executing a CONVERT command.
o Bug fixed: 256 and 257 character string and mnemonic literals were
accepted by the compiler rather than producing the required syntax
error.
o Bug fixed: if a dL4 process was terminated by a Unix "kill -9"
command, SPAWN statements failed for other users until the message
queue associated with the killed processed was deleted.
o Bug fixed: if an application updated a GUI element while the element
had the focus, a "value change" event was triggered when the element
lost the focus.
o Bug fixed: the 'RECT' mnemonic and the BOX statement sometimes drew
boxes that were taller and wider than they should have been.
o Bug fixed: the SPC(n) function, where "n" was not a standard function
number, only looked at runtime parameters in the environment and did
not check the registry.
o Bug fixed: TABbing between GUI fields did not work in '1WCEVENT'
mode when input was deferred.
o Bug fixed: dL4 output sometimes "froze" requiring the user to
terminate the dL4 process.
o Bug fixed: typing a function key while input was deferred in '1WCEVENT'
mode caused an infinite loop.
o Bug fixed: the printer driver sometimes lost output data when open
with "binary=true".
o Beta bug fixed: conversion profile "[Edit]" rules were not applied
to line that did not have line numbers.
o Beta bug fixed: conversion profile "[Edit]" rules were applied to
the line number portion of a source line.
Dec 4 2001 (Release 4.4)
o The SAVE file revision has been changed from 2.11 to 2.12 in order to
support new features in dL4 4.4. Full upward compatibility is
provided, so program files created by earlier versions of dL4 can
still be used. Programs created by this release of dL4 can be used
by earlier releases of dL4 4.x if the programs do not use any of the
new features.
o Two new GUI mnemonics have been defined: 'WCBQRYBUF' and 'WCEQRYBUF'.
Printing 'WCBQRYBUF' to a window enables special buffering for the
data returned by the 'WCQUERY' mnemonic. Normally, sending 'WCQUERY'
to a GUI element (such as 'WCSTRING') causes the element to return
its current value. For example, sending 'n WCQUERY' where 'n' is the
element number of a 'WCSTRING' edit box causes the text in the edit
box to be returned as input to the window. This can complicate
programming because query results are mixed in with event data such
as function keys or GUI element status changes. The special
buffering enabled by 'WCBQRYBUF' separates the query results from the
event data. Event data can be read by normal INPUT statements, but
the query buffer can only be read from "record 1" of the window
channel. For example,
! Channel 3 is open to window
Print #3;'WCBQRYBUF';
Print #3;'5 WCQUERY';
Input #3,1;S$
In order to read from "record 1" of the default window channel, use
the special record number -3 (described below) or the DUPCHANNEL
intrinsic CALL. Once a 'WCBQRYBUF' mnemonic is printed, the special
buffering mode applies to all windows and persists until a 'WCEQRYBUF'
or 'IORS' mnemonic is printed. Like other GUI mnemonics, these
mnemonics are supported only when using dL4Term (4.3.1.3 or higher) or
in dL4 for Windows.
o The special channel numbers -3 and -4 can now be used in INPUT, READ,
WRITE, SET, and other I/O statements to perform I/O to the current
standard input (-3) and output (-4) channels. This extension is
particularly useful when using the 'WCBQRYBUF' input mode since it
supports reading from record 1 of the current window channel.
o The intrinsic CALL DupChannel() now recognizes the special channel
numbers of -3 and -4 as the current input and output channels. This
allow access to the current Dynamic Window channel.
o A new mnemonic, 'PGMHELPFN', has been defined for dL4 when used with
dL4Term or in dL4 for Windows. The mnemonic sequence
PChr$(n,"text");'PGMHELPFN'
will program function key 'n' ('Fn') to send the character string
"text" as input when pressed. In addition to "text", the function key
will send the action string of the currently selected GUI element, if
any. This mnemonic is similar to 'PGMFN', but can be used to implement
context dependent function keys such as help or search keys. 'RF' or
'XX' mnemonics can be used to reset all function keys to their original
values of 'Fn'.
o A new function, MSC(45), has been implemented to return the GUI element
number of the user selected GUI element or a WCQUERYed GUI element.
The value returned is not the current element number, but rather the
number at the time of the most recent input. For example, assume a user
had selected edit box 1, typed 'F6', moved to edit box 5, and then typed
'F6' again. If an INPUT statement read only the first function key
value, then MSC(45) would return 1, the selected element at the time the
function key was pressed. The value of MSC(45) would not change to 5
until the second function key value was read by an INPUT or READ
statement.
o A new mnemonic, 'WCRESETFONT', has been defined for dL4 GUI programming.
The new mnemonic restores the default font for use by newly created GUI
elements. Typically, the mnemonic would be used to clear the font set
by a previous 'WCSETFONT' mnemonic.
o The statement
SYSTEM 31,"C:\\Program Files\\Application\\program.exe",S
will try to execute "program.exe" on the user's PC. The variable
"S" will be set to zero if the program was successfully started and
non-zero if the program couldn't be started. The SYSTEM statement
suspends execution of the dL4 program and waits until the program
exits. In the default configuration, the user will be prompted via
a message box to permit or deny running the command. The DWORD
registry value
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\AllowSYSTEMCmd
or
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\WinTerm\AllowSYSTEMCmd
can be set to one to automatically accept commands without displaying
the message box (note: if set to zero, an "AllowSYSTEMCmd" value in
HKEY_CURRENT_USER will require the message box no matter how the
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE value is set). This SYSTEM mode is included for
compatibility with the client command execution feature of dL4 for Unix.
o Two new mnemonics, 'SUSPENDAUX' and 'CONTINUEAUX', have been
defined to suspend or continue output to an auxiliary printer after
a 'BA', 'BO', or 'AE' mnemonic has started output to such a printer.
These mnemonics make it possible to mix output between the printer
and the screen.
o The Preferences->Printer dialog now allows the user to set an
"Options" value. The "binary=true" option can be used with non-device
printers to allow unformatted character sequences, such as PCL commands,
to be sent directly to a printer (device printers always operate in a
binary mode).
o A new runtime parameter, DL4HANGUPEXIT, can be set to trigger an
automatic exit if an unrecoverable error occurs on standard input or
standard output. The feature can only be used if standard input or
output are open to sockets.
o A new SYSTEM statement mode has been added to return the number of
available 512 byte disk blocks on a file system. The statement
SYSTEM 32,"path",B
returns in "B" the number of available blocks on the file system
that contains the directory or file "path". The SCOPE CONVERT
command and LOADSAVE utility "-c" option will convert UniBasic/BITS
UNIT mode 3 statements to SYSTEM 32 statements.
o Conversion profiles can now define functions to be translated in addition
to user CALLs. For example, if the line "ERRMSG$=ERM" is included in a
library section of a conversion profile, then loading a program with that
profile will convert all instances of the ERM function to ERRMSG$ and the
required declarations for the library function will be inserted into the
converted program.
o Conversion profiles can now include a "[Standard]" section to define
the standard pre-defined function names of the source language. This
section can be used if there are problems with names that collide with
dL4 standard function names (such as "TRIM$").
o Conversion profiles can now include a "[Settings]" section. The
"LANGUAGE=xxxx" line in the "[Settings]" section selects the
source language for the conversion where "xxxx" can be "IRIS", "BITS",
or "IMS". If the source language is "IMS", statements such as
'OPEN #c;"R","Filename"' will be converted to 'ROPEN #c;"Filename"'.
o When loading a program using a conversion profile, parenthesized
subscripts are now converted to bracket subscripts ("A(5)" becomes
"A[5]").
o The syntax of the multiline IF structure has been enhanced to accept an
optional "THEN" keyword after an IF or ELSE IF boolean expression. The
"THEN" keyword is accepted and discarded.
o The LOADSAVE utility now supports a "-C filename" option to perform
source-to-source conversions. The command:
loadsave -C converted.bas -c convert.prf orig.bas
converts the program text source file "orig.bas" to dL4 using the
conversion profile "convert.prf" and outputs the converted program
text to the text file "converted.bas". The conversion profile can
contain an "[OutputFormat]" section with lines such "Indentation=n",
"LeftMargin=n", and "TabSpacing=n" to control the formatting of the
output lines. The "TabSpacing" value specifies that a tab character
should replace each occurrence of "n" leading spaces. These values
can also be specified on the loadsave command line by using the
"-i n,m" and "-t n" options.
o A simple include file feature has been added to the LOADSAVE utility.
The INCLUDE statement is recognized only by LOADSAVE and reads
source text from a specified file into the program following the
INCLUDE statement. The environment variable INCSTRING can be used
to specify a space separated list of directories that should be
searched when opening an include file. If lines in an include file
use line numbers, the lines will be inserted at the specified lines
replacing any previously loaded lines with those line numbers. The
INCLUDE statement can have both a line number and a label. Example:
Include "filename"
o A new option, "-n linenumber", has been added to the LOADSAVE utility
to specify the starting line number when using source files without
line numbers. By using a starting line number other than the default
of 1, an open range of line numbers can be left for use by conversion
profiles that insert declarations and other header lines.
o A program line can now consist of a label without a statement. For
example, the line:
NEXTFILE:
is now legal and will be treated as the label "NEXTFILE" followed by
an empty comment ("NEXTFILE: !").
o To improve compatibility with other BASIC languages, it is now legal
for a program line to have a FOR statement follow an IF statement.
o A new channel function, CHF$(1300+c), has been implemented to return the
native path of the file open on channel "c".
o A new channel function, CHF(1400+c), has been implemented to return the
file identification number of the file open on channel "c". In dL4 for
Unix, this function returns the inode number of the file. In this
release, this function is only supported by the raw file driver.
o Channel functions 12 and 13 have been added to the list of channel
values displayed by the SCOPE FILE command and in program dumps.
o The GET statement can now be used to determine the character set used
by data file records. For example, the statement:
Get #C,-1299;Name$
stores in "Name$" the name of the character set used on channel "C".
An error will occur if this operation is not supported by the driver
open on channel "C".
o The LUMAP runtime parameter can now control whether portable filenames
are treated as case-insensitive (default) or case-sensitive. If the
LUMAP parameter value begins with "(mixedcase)", all portable (relative)
filenames will be treated as case-sensitive. This option only controls
how filenames are translated to and from the native filename format; the
result of using case-sensitive filenames on a non-case-sensitive
file system is operating system dependent.
o A new, optional program file format is now available for Unix systems
to allow direct execution of dL4 programs from a shell command line.
The new format starts each dL4 program file with the line "#!string"
where string is a program path. For example, the command:
save <755> (exec=/usr/bin/run) programname
would save the current program into the file "programname" as an
executable script with an initial line of "#!/usr/bin/run". The
program file could then be executed directly at a shell command
line by typing "programname". The program file would also be usable
in dL4 SCOPE, in CALL/CHAIN/SPAWN statements, or in dL4 for Windows.
The "exec" line can include options RUN such '-t ""'.
In addition to the "exec=" option, executable Unix scripts can be
produced by using the "stdexec" or "netexec" options which are
equivalent to "exec=/usr/bin/run" and "exec=/usr/bin/run -t".
Program files can be made executable on Windows systems by using a
unique filename suffix such as ".dl4" and then associating that
suffix with the required command line.
o A new program option, "STRING REDIM IS LEGAL", has been implemented
to make it legal to re-dimension simple string variables without
FREEing the variable. The following program creates a string
variable with a dimension of 20 and then expands the string to a
dimension of 80:
100 Option String Redim Is Legal
110 Dim S$[20]
120 S$ = "Test program"
130 Dim S$[80]
140 S$ = S$ + " with too many characters for DIM S$[20]"
150 Print S$
Note that the original value of S$ is preserved when it is expanded.
o Support has been added for DynamicXport Lite.
o Channel command 36 (DCC_SETOPENMODE) can now change the exclusive or
shared open mode of an open file. This operation is currently
supported in Portable/Universal Indexed, Contiguous, or Formatted
files. Example:
Channel 36,#10;"E" ! change to exclusive open
o New intrinsic CALLs SYSRC() and DBASE() have been added to provide
compatibility with other Business BASICs.
o Two new intrinsic CALLs, RMVSPACES() and RMVSPACESI(), have been added
to duplicate the behavior of CALL $RSPCS() in UniBasic and other BASICs.
BASIC syntax:
Call RmvSpaces(SOURCE$, DEST$, MODE)
Call RmvSpacesI(SOURCE$, DEST$, MODE)
If "MODE" is not equal to one, then "SOURCE$" is copied to "DEST$" with
all leading and trailing spaces removed. If "MODE" is equal to 1, then
"SOURCE$" is copied to "DEST$" with all spaces removed except those
within quotes, all characters after and including an unquoted "!" are
removed, and a trailing linefeed is appended if the string ends in a "!".
Call RmvSpaceI() differs in that "MODE" 1 always appends a linefeed
and a "MODE" other than 0 or 1 causes an error.
o A new intrinsic CALL, WHOLOCK(), is now available for compatibility with
dL4 for Unix. This CALL is used on Unix to determine which port or
process has locked a specific record of a file. Because the Windows
operating system does not support this function, the CALL will always
report the record as unlocked. The CALL syntax is:
CALL WHOLOCK(Channel, RecordNumber, PortNumber [, ProcessID])
where "Channel" is a channel number open to a file and "RecordNumber" is
the record number in that file to be tested. When the CALL returns,
"PortNumber" will be set to -1 to indicate that the record is not
locked.
o A new intrinsic string function, DATEUSING$, has been implemented to
format date values. The function syntax is:
DateUsing$(DateValue#, FormatString$)
where "DateValue#" is a date expression to be formatted and
"FormatString$" is a string expression containing a mask string. The
following formatting codes are recognized in the mask string:
D Numeric day of week (0 - 6, 0 is Sunday)
d Numeric day of week (0 - 6, 0 is Sunday)
DAY Day name in upper case (SUNDAY, MONDAY, ...)
day Day name in mixed case (Sunday, Monday, ...)
Day Day name in mixed case (Sunday, Monday, ...)
DY Abbreviated day name in upper case (SUN, MON, ...)
dy Abbreviated day name in mixed case (Sun, Mon, ...)
Dy Abbreviated day name in mixed case (Sun, Mon, ...)
DD Numeric day of month zero filled ("01" - "31")
Dd Numeric day of month space filled (" 1" - "31")
dD Numeric day of month space filled ("01" - "31")
dd Numeric day of month ("1" - "31")
DDD Numeric day of year zero filled ("001" - "366")
Ddd Numeric day of year space filled (" 1" - "366")
ddd Numeric day of year ("1" - "366")
HH Numeric hour of day zero filled ("00" - "23")
Hh Numeric hour of day space filled (" 0" - "23")
hH Numeric hour of day space filled (" 0" - "23")
hh Numeric hour of day ("0" - "23")
MM Numeric month of year zero filled ("01" - "12")
Mm Numeric month of year space filled (" 1" - "12")
mm Numeric month of year ("1" - "12")
MONTH Month name in upper case (JANUARY, FEBRUARY, ...)
month Month name in mixed case (January, February, ...)
Month Month name in mixed case (January, February, ...)
MON Abbreviated month name in upper case (JAN, FEB, ...)
mon Abbreviated day name in mixed case (Jan, Feb, ...)
Mon Abbreviated day name in mixed case (Jan, Feb, ...)
NN Numeric minute of hour zero filled ("00" - "59")
Nn Numeric minute of hour space filled (" 0" - "59")
nN Numeric minute of hour space filled (" 0" - "59")
nn Numeric minute of hour ("0" - "59")
PM "AM" for time before noon, "PM" for time afterward
pm "am" for time before noon, "pm" for time afterward
P "A" for time before noon, "P" for time afterward
p "a" for time before noon, "p" for time afterward
Q Numeric quarter of year ("1" - "4", 1 is Oct - Dec)
q Numeric quarter of year ("1" - "4", 1 is Oct - Dec)
SS Numeric second of minute zero filled ("00" - "59")
Ss Numeric second of minute space filled (" 0" - "59")
sS Numeric second of minute space filled (" 0" - "59")
ss Numeric second of minute ("0" - "59")
TH Ordinal number in upper case ("1ST", "2ND", ...)
th Ordinal number in lower case ("1st", "2nd", ...)
WW Numeric week of year zero filled ("01" - "53")
Ww Numeric week of year space filled (" 1" - "53")
wW Numeric week of year space filled (" 1" - "53")
ww Numeric week of year ("1" - "53")
YYYY Four digit year
YY Two digit year
Formatting codes are replaced by their associated values. Any
unrecognized characters will be copied unchanged to the result
string.
Example:
Print DateUsing$(Tim#(0), "MM/DD/YYYY HH:MM")
o The SPC(n) function has been extended to return the numeric value of
the environment variable "SPCn" where "n" is an undefined SPC function
number. For example, if the environment variable SPC105 was set to
"65", then SPC(105) would return a value of 65. User defined SPC
functions should be defined at 100 and above to avoid conflicts with
any future standard SPC functions.
o The intrinsic CALL PROGRAMDUMP() has been extended with a second syntax:
Call ProgramDump(filename$,options$)
where "filename$" is the output file path and "options$" can be set
to the string value "append" to cause PROGRAMDUMP() to append the
new output to the output file rather than replacing the output file.
o The FoxPro Full-ISAM driver now supports mixed case filenames when
used in an absolute path.
o A new open option, "DataExt=xxxx", has been added to the FoxPro
Full-ISAM driver to support opening dBase files that do not have the
standard ".dbf" extension.
o A new character set, "Stripped ASCII", has been added to support
conversion of files from other BASICs where the most significant bit
of 8-bit characters is ignored.
o The Portable Formatted, Contiguous, and Indexed-Contiguous file
drivers now support a new option, "NUMMAP=IEEE-LE", for files that
contain least significant byte first ("Little Endian") data. This
feature has been added to support conversion of non-dL4 data files.
o Bug fixed: the CHF(600) function returned incorrect values for
directories.
o Bug fixed: the timeout equals -5 option to disable record locking
on formatted and contiguous files did not work.
May 1 2001 (Release 4.3.1)
o The DynamicXport runtime support in dL4 has been updated to support the
current release of DynamicXport.
o The DynamicXport intrinsic CALLs (DXOPEN, DXCLOSE, DXGET, DXSET, and
DXURL) require a DynamicXport product license in the SSN before the
CALLs can be used. Without a valid DynamicXport license, the CALLs will
generate an error 38.
o A new open option, "binary=", has been implemented in the
pipe driver. If a pipe is opened with a "binary=true" option, all data
written to or read from the pipe will be passed as 8-bit binary
characters without any formatting or end-of-line processing. Example:
Open #1,"(binary=true)$program"
o Two new open options have been added to the Windows Page Printer
driver. The "LPI=n" option selects a default font size such that
"n" lines per inch will be printed. The "CPI=n" option selects a
default font size such that "n" characters per inch will be printed.
The two options can be used together. The following example shows
a printer script that uses 8 lines per inch, 10 characters per inch,
with half inch horizontal and vertical margins:
rem dl4opts=openas=selected page printer,lpi=8,cpi=10,hmargin=36,vmargin=36
rem
rem dL4 selected by dialog printer script
o A new intrinsic CALL, NCRC32(), has been implemented for compatiblity
with Unibasic 7. The CALL provides the same functionality as the
existing CRC32() intrinsic function. The new CALL has the following
syntax:
CALL NCRC32(C, S$ [, O])
where "C" is a ten digit or larger numeric variable that will receive
the calculated CRC-32 checksum, "S$" is a string value to be
checksummed, and "O" is an optional numeric value containing a CRC-32
value from a previous calculation.
o A new MSC() function, MSC(44), has been implemented so that programs
can determine if the Dynamic Windows system is active. If Dynamic
Windows is "on", MSC(44) will return one. If Dynamic Windows is "off",
then MSC(44) will return zero.
o The checksum utility in the tools directory now accepts a "-m" option
to generate MD5 checksums instead of CRC-32 checksums.
o Bug fixed: multiple selection list boxes (such as 'WCLIST') did not
work on Windows 95/98/ME systems if two or more items were selected.
Mar 13 2001 (Release 4.3)
o Four new intrinsic CALLs have been added to support writing DynamicXport
applications. The new CALLs are DXOPEN, DXCLOSE, DXGET, and DXSET
which are described in the DynamicXport programming documentation.
DynamicXport is a new middleware product from Dynamic Concepts.
o A local and private cache for dL4 programs has been implemented to
improve program load performance, particularly when programs are
loaded from remote networked file systems. The feature can be
enabled by setting the environment variable DL4LOCALCACHE to the
size of the desired local cache in bytes. The cache resides in
process memory, is not shared with other users, and may increase
process size. Programs in the local cache are identified by the
absolute path of the program file. If a program file is modified
while it is in the local cache, the old version in the local cache
will continue to be used until the program is flushed from the
cache by lack of use or a local SAVE command to the file. To
effectively use the local cache, programs should be in the first
program search directory (for example, the first directory in the
LIBSTRING environment variable).
o A new driver, "Bidirectional Command Pipe", has been added to
allow opening bidirectional pipes to an operating system command
or program. Using the driver, it is possible to start a command and
then both write data/commands to the command and read the results.
o A new mnemonic, 'WCDEFAULTBTN', has been implemented to create default
push buttons. These buttons are identical to those created by the
'WCBUTTON' mnemonic except that the button is marked as the default
and will be triggered by the user typing ENTER if the focus is on the
button or on another non-pushbutton GUI input element. The arguments
to the 'WCDEFAULTBTN' mnemonic are identical to those of the 'WCBUTTON'
mnemonic. Note: if the 'nWCFOCUS' mnemonic is used to set focus to
a non-default pushbutton, that button becomes the default.
o Enhancement: the 'BEGIN' mnemonic can now be sent to GUI edit boxes
(such as 'WCSTRING') to place the cursor at the start of the current
text and to select the current text for replacement. The user can
tab or otherwise move to a different GUI element to leave the value
unchanged or type new characters to completely replace the existing
value. To send the 'BEGIN' mnemonic to an edit box, the edit box
must be the currently selected GUI element (via 'nWCSELECT'). The
following example could be used to initialize the contents of a
newly created 'WCSTRING' edit box and select the contents for
replacement:
Print '4WCSELECT';"Initial Data";'BEGIN';'0WCSELECT';
The 'n BEGIN' mnemonic can be used to perform the 'BEGIN' function
on GUI element "n" and also set the input focus to that element:
Print '4BEGIN';
o Enhancement: the drop down section of drop down lists ('WCLISTDROP'
and 'WCEDITDROP') can now extend below the bottom of the window on
which the list is placed. This makes it possible to place a drop
down list near the bottom of a window. If the drop down section
extends below the bottom of the screen, the drop down section will
be displayed above the normal position.
o Enhancement: the 'WCQUERY' mnemonic can now be used with two numeric
parameters. The mnemonic 'm,n WCQUERY' (or PChr$(m,n);'WCQUERY')
performs a WCQUERY on all GUI elements between m and n inclusive.
o ESCAPE, ABORT, and function key ('Fn') characters typed in a GUI
input element (such as 'WCSTRING') are now passed to the parent
window of the GUI element. This allows applications to use
ESCAPE and function keys to trigger special actions in GUI
programs.
o A new mnemonic, 'n WCWHERE', has been implemented to return as
input the action 'n' string value of the GUI element currently
selected as the input focus. See 'WCACTION' in the dL4 GUI
tutorial for details on action strings.
o "Clicking" on a selected item in a list box ('WCLIST') now
unselects the item.
o The 'UNMARK' mnemonic is now supported for single selection list
boxes.
o Behavior change: list boxes ('WCLIST') now occupy the full vertical
space assigned to the box. Previously, the height was truncated
to eliminate any partially displayed list items (a list box that was
4.5 items high was displayed as 4 items high). This change makes
it possible to align the bottoms of list boxes with varying heights.
o Behavior change: the MODAL style is no longer ignored in child
windows. A MODAL child window will disable all GUI input elements
and typing in the parent window. The parent window itself is not
otherwise disabled because that would disable the child window.
o A new option value, 32, has been implemented for all GUI input
elements. The new option causes any loss of input focus to be
reported as an input value change (option 2).
o Buttons ('WCBUTTON'), check boxes ('WCCHECK'), and radio buttons
('WCRADIO') now support multiline labels. Carriage returns ('CR')
can be placed in labels to explicitly split lines.
o The hidden field option, option 16, is now supported in list drop
boxes ('WCLISTDROP').
o A new printer mnemonic, 'nLANDSCAPE', has been implemented to
select landscape mode if "n" is 1 and portrait mode if "n" is 0.
The mnemonic should only be used at the beginning of a page.
o New mnemonics 'n,d GRIDENGLISH', 'n,d GRIDMETRIC', and 'n,d GRIDFONT"
have been created to provide a higher precision method of setting the
coordinate grid. In these new two parameter mnemonics, "n" and "d"
are the numerator and denominator of a fraction which is passed to the
mnemonic as a parameter. Thus the mnemonic string '1000,72 GRIDENGLISH'
is equivalent to 'x GRIDENGLISH' where "x" is equal to 1000/72. Since
'GRIDENGLISH' sets the coordinate grid in 1000ths of an inch, this
sets the grid to 1/72 inches (points). These mnemonics are supported
by both the window and page printer drivers.
o A new mnemonic 'n LPI' has been implemented to set the number of lines
per inch when printing to the Page Printer driver.
o A new mnemonic 'n CPI' has been implemented to set the number of
characters (columns) per inch when printing to the Page Printer driver.
A second form, 'n,d CPI' has been implemented to use the fraction "n/d"
when setting the number of columns per inch.
o A new mnemonic, 'n FONTCELL', has been implemented to set the font height
by specifying the line height, rather than the character height. The
mnemonic argument is in grid coordinates and is identical to that used
by 'n FONTSIZE'.
o A new mnemonic, 'MARGIN', has been implemented to set horizontal
('w MARGIN') and vertical ('w,h MARGIN') margins in the Page Printer
driver. The arguments to the mnemonic are margins expressed in grid
coordinate system units. For example, if the current coordinate grid
is tenth inches ('100GRIDENGLISH'), then a half inch left margin can
be set by '5MARGIN' or a half inch left margin combined with a one
inch top/bottom margin can be set by '5,10MARGIN'.
o A new open option, "BINARY=", has been added to the Page
Printer drivers. This option causes all characters printed to a
printer channel to be sent directly to the printer without any
processing or translation. All characters sent in this mode must be
between 1 and 255 decimal. This option is intended for applications
that need complete printer control. Example:
Open #1,{"","binary=true"} As "Default Page Printer"
o A new function, MSC$(8), has been implemented to return the native path
separator string. Under dL4 for Windows, MSC$(8) returns "\".
o The IOBO mnemonic now accepts either "\377\" or "\177\" as the
count terminator.
o A LEVEL command has been implemented in SCOPE to return the dL4
revision level and the license number.
o A SHOW command has been implemented in BASIC to find all lines
containing a specified variable name. The command syntax is identical
to that of the FIND command.
o The GUI window driver now treats the 'LK' (lock keyboard) and 'UK'
(unlock keyboard) mnemonics as no-ops rather than reporting an illegal
character error.
o Behavior change: if the input focus is on a 'WCBUTTON' button and the
tab option is enabled on at least one GUI element in the same window,
then typing ENTER will trigger the button.
o A new startup option, "-X", has been added to support DynamicXport
applications. DynamicXport applications written in dL4 are started
with the command "run -X programpath". This format identifies the
program as a DynamicXport application and configures dL4 with
necessary options. The "-X" option disables all terminal translation.
o A new startup option, "-B", has been added to set the initial I/O
mode of the standard input and output channels to binary I/O without
input echo.
o The intrinsic CALL ENV() has been extended to support runtime
modification of the SPC(5), SPC(7), and MSC(7) values. Setting the
values of the SPC5, SPC7, or MSC7 environment variables will control
the subsequent values returned by the SPC() and MSC() functions.
o A new open option has been added to the pipe driver. The CLOSEWAIT
option sets the time in seconds that the driver will wait for the child
process to exit when the channel is closed. The option "CLOSEWAIT=0"
will not wait at all. The pipe driver does NOT terminate the child
process when the CLOSEWAIT period expires; the driver simply closes
the channel and leaves the child process running. Example:
Open #1,"(closewait=120)$$script.sh"
o Behavior change: a file specification can now contain more than one
file attribute specification. Multiple specifications are
concatenated before the attributes are processed. Example:
Build #1," [1:40] <00> filename"
o Behavior change: the 'BG' and 'EG' mnemonics are now ignored by the
Page Printer driver instead of causing an "illegal character" error.
o A new utility, MAKEHUGE, has been added to the tools directory to
convert Indexed Contiguous or Formatted files to Huge Indexed
Contiguous and Huge Formatted files. This permits the files to
grow beyond 2 gigabytes in size. Note: huge files can be used only
on Windows NT, Windows 2000, and some Unix systems.
o A new intrinsic string function, Trim$(), has been added to remove
both leading and trailing blanks or other whitespace. Since Trim$()
is an intrinsic function, a "DECLARE INTRINSIC FUNCTION TRIM$"
statement is required in order to use the new function.
o A new intrinsic CALL, FlushAllChannels, has been added to request
the operating system to write all system buffers to disk for each
open channel. The CALL performs a "CHANNEL #c,DCC_SYNC,1;" on each
open channel. Example:
Declare Intrinsic Sub FlushAllChannels
Call FlushAllChannels()
o Operating system file buffers are now flushed whenever a file is
closed. This improves file stability if a system is shutdown
improperly.
o A new open option, "RTRIM=", has been implemented in the
Full-ISAM drivers. If the option "RTRIM=TRUE" is used, all
trailing spaces are removed when reading fields. The option is
case insensitive and an argument of "T" is identical to "TRUE".
Example:
Open #1,"(rtrim=t)test.dbf"
o The GET statement can be used to retrieve the local or remote IP
addresses associated with a socket. Example:
Get #c,-1598;RemoteAddress$
Get #c,-1599;LocalAddress$
By using the DUPCHANNEL intrinsic CALL, these operations can also be
used on the standard input and output channels if they are open to a
socket.
o Behavior change: the ROPEN statement can now be used to open a
directory. Previously, an "illegal open mode" error was generated.
o Extension functions have been added to the communications, program,
and Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM drivers to ease customization.
See driver\wcommext.c, driver\progext.c, and driver\msqlext.c for
details.
o Spaces are now allowed in Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM field,
table, owner, or database names. Such names must be quoted.
o The operation "CHANNEL #c,20,1;" has been implemented to
flush operating system buffers associated with the file open on
channel "c".
o A new utility, VERINDEX, has been added to the tools directory to
verify the index portions of Portable or Universal Indexed Contiguous
files. The utility can detect various forms of index corruption.
o Bug fixed: a statement with a trailing backslash such as "10 A=1 \" was
not recognized as a syntax error and sometimes caused a memory
violation if the program was executed or SAVEd.
o Bug fixed: radio buttons reported a value change only on the first
occurrence.
o Bug fixed: new independent windows were sized using the coordinate
system of the last accessed window instead of the main window.
o Bug fixed: 'nWCMARK' did not work after 'CU' was sent to a list box or
drop down list box. Also fixed a memory leak when using hidden fields.
o Bug fixed: GUI option 4, report changed value, treated any gain of
focus in a radio button as a changed value.
o Bug fixed: memory violations sometimes occurred after immediate mode
PRINTs of non-existent structure variables.
o Bug fixed: the command "m DELETE n" caused a memory violation if
line "m" was greater than line "n".
o Bug fixed: the 'n WCUNMARK' mnemonic would unselect item "m" in a
single selection list box if "m" was currently selected, but item
"n" was not.
o Bug fixed: tabbing between GUI input elements is now supported in
child windows and is no longer restricted to the main and independent
windows.
o Bug fixed: closing a window and then immediately opening a new
window caused some output for that new window to be directed to
the main window.
o Bug fixed: GUI elements and child windows were not positioned
correctly when a window was scrolled from the 0,0 position and
under some other circumstances.
o Bug fixed: If GUI input elements with tab options existed in the
parent window, it was not possible to enter input in a child window.
o Bug fixed: the Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver now detects when
the maximum number of connections has been exceeded and reports an
error 82, "too many channels in use".
o Bug fixed: the Microsoft SQL Server Full-ISAM driver no longer treats
an option string of "" as a file syntax error.
o Bug fixed: deallocating a non-existent record with the SEARCH
statement decremented the number of records in-use count in a
Portable Indexed Contiguous file.
o Bug fixed: single character reads or reads with timeouts from a
text file or pipe sometimes lost characters.
o Bug fixed: address violations sometimes occurred when SAVEing a
program.
o Bug fixed: entering the debugger or enabling a program trace while in
a SWAPped program sometimes caused file corruption.
o Bug fixed: certain types of file corruption in the index portion of an
Indexed Contiguous file caused applications and dL4 itself to hang.
o Bug fixed: a parameter mismatch in an EXTERNAL FUNCTION call sometimes
caused a memory violation.
o Bug fixed: outputting a bad mnemonic sequence to the Page Printer
driver sometimes caused the driver to hang.
o Bug fixed: printing a mnemonic with a string parameter to the PFILTER
utility sometimes caused following mnemonics to fail with a bad
character error.
Aug 1 2000 (Release 4.2)
o The maximum size of the index portion of Portable and Universal
Indexed-Contiguous files has been increased to 256 gigabytes on
Windows NT or Windows 2000 systems. The size of the data portion
is limited only by the amount of storage space available. To use
this feature a file must be created as a "Portable Huge Indexed-
Contiguous" or "Universal Huge Indexed-Contiguous" file.
Example:
Build #1,"[1:40]File" As "Portable Huge Indexed-Contiguous"
o The "H" option letter ('BUILD #1,"[10:100]file"') can be used to
select the "Huge" format when creating a Portable Formatted,
Contiguous, or Indexed file. This option allows a file to grow to
more than 2 gigabytes in size on Windows NT or Windows 2000 systems.
o The 'BA', 'EA', 'BO', 'EO', 'AE', and 'AD' mnemonics are now supported
to direct output to an "auxiliary printer". When printer output is
enabled, output will be sent to the printer selected via the "Printer"
sub-menu of the "Preferences" menu. That printer can be configured to
be a specific Windows printer, the default Windows printer, a user
selected Windows printer, a COMn serial device, or an LPTn printer
device. When sending output to a Windows printer, a document will be
considered complete and all pages will be printed when auxiliary output
is disabled by an 'EA', 'EO', 'AD', or 'XX' mnemonic. A program should
not expect to be able to suspend output with 'EA', 'EO', or 'AD' and
then later continue output on the same printer page.
o The 'WS', 'ES', 'SO', and 'SF' mnemonics are now supported to display
a status line at the bottom of a window. The 'WS' mnemonic redirects
all output to the status line until an 'ES' mnemonic is output. The
'SO' (status line on) and 'SF' (status line off) mnemonics control
whether the status line is visible. Note: the mnemonics and status
line text must be output to the window that will contain the status
line. When using dynamic windows ("WINDOW OPEN"), the "WINDOW OFF"
statement or the CALL DUPCHANNEL intrinsic should be used to output
status line mnemonics to the main window rather than the current
window.
o The 'WD' and 'NR' mnemonics have been implemented to change the current
font size to either the default font size or 6 tenths of the default
font size. Assuming a default window width of 80 characters, the 'NR'
mnemonic will set the font and window size to provide a width of 132
narrow characters. Both mnemonics clear the window with the equivalent
of a 'CS' mnemonic.
o A new mnemonic, 'PGMFN' has been defined to control the text sent by
the 'Fn' function keys. The mnemonic sequence
PChr$(n,"text");'PGMFN'
will program function key 'n' ('Fn') to send the character string
"text" as input when pressed. The 'RF' or 'XX' mnemonics can be used
to reset all function keys to their original values of 'Fn'.
o A new mnemonic, 'INVERT' has been defined to invert colors within a
specified region. The mnemonic has the following forms:
'INVERT' - Invert colors from the current position
to the end of the current line.
'n INVERT' - Invert colors from the current position
for 'n' characters.
'w,h INVERT' - Invert colors from the current position
within a rectangle of 'w' characters width
and 'h' characters height.
'x1,y1,x2,y2 INVERT' - Invert colors within rectangle defined by
the points 'x1,y1' and 'x2,y2' of the
current coordinate grid.
o In Windows, the user can exit dL4 by selecting the exit button or
the "close" action of the system menu. Exiting dL4 in this manner
prevents the application from cleaning up any partially written
transaction. A new mnemonic, 'ONCLOSE', has been defined to allow
applications to control such exits. The 'ONCLOSE' mnemonic has the
following forms:
PChr$(0,"text");'ONCLOSE' - Display "text" within a message
box and give the user a choice
of exiting dL4 or continuing the
application.
PChr$(1,"text");'ONCLOSE' - Display "text" within a message
box and prevent the user from
exiting dL4.
PChr$(2,"text");'ONCLOSE' - Prevent the user from exiting dL4
and treat "text" as input for the
program.
PChr$(0,"");'ONCLOSE' - Disable any previously set ONCLOSE
action.
Programs using the 'ONCLOSE' mnemonic should output a null action
('PChr$(0,"");'ONCLOSE') or an 'XX' mnemonic before exiting to clear
the ONCLOSE action. Note: this mnemonic will also be supported by
dL4 4.2 for Unix when used with dL4Term 4.2.
o Scrolling performance of a full window has been improved by 50 to 80
percent on typical systems.
o Behavior change: input to any window can now be read from any window.
For example, if windows are open on channel 1 and channel 2, pressing
a button in the window open on channel 1 will create input that can be
read on either channel 1 or channel 2. This change makes it easier for
programs to use more than one input window at a time. Note that
when using multiple windows, all of the GUI elements should have
unique element numbers even if the elements are in different windows.
o The "Initial Values" sub-menu of the "Preferences" menu has been
renamed as the "Window" sub-menu.
o A new driver class, "Email", has been added to send email. In this
release, the driver requires sending email through an SMTP server such
as provided by Unix servers or most ISPs. Non-SMTP mechanisms may be
added in the future and should not require any application changes
unless SMTP specific options (such as "SERVER=") are used (use the
DL4EMAILSERVER registry entry instead). After opening the driver, a
program simply prints text to be emailed to the channel. Files can be
attached and sent as part of the email by using an 'ADD #c;"Filename"'
statement. If the file consists of multiple files, like an Indexed
Contiguous file, each subfile must be sent with a separate ADD
statement.
The path argument to the driver is an email address list. An email
address list consists of one or more space separated email addresses.
Email address lists are also used in the options such as "TO=" described
below. The driver options parameter ("(xxx)") can be used to pass the
following options:
"TO=addresses" one or more destination email addresses. May
be used in addition to or instead of placing
addresses in the path.
"BCC=addresses" one or more "BCC" email addresses. These are
similar to "CC" addresses, but they are not
included in the email header.
"CC=addresses" one or more "CC" email addresses.
"FROM=addresses" one or more sender addresses.
"REPLYTO=addresses" one or more reply addresses. This option would
only be used if the reply address was different
from the sender ("FROM=") address.
"SUBJECT=text" email title or subject. The text may be placed
in quotation marks if necessary.
"SERVER=name" SMTP server name. Defaults to the value defined
in the registry (see below).
"PORT=n" SMTP port number. Defaults to the standard
SMTP port.
"PROTOCOL=name" Email protocol name. Only "smtp", the default
protocol, is supported by this release.
"ATTACHAS=name" File attachment encoding type. This option must
be specified if file attachments will be used.
The value of "name" must be either "mime" or
"default" (which is "mime" in this release).
"TIMEOUT=n" timeout period in tenth-seconds for communication
with the SMTP server. This option is used to
increase the default timeout period and should
not be needed.
A program using the email driver must specify at least one destination
email address in the path or a "TO=" option. At least one "FROM="
email address must be provided. The SMTP server name must be defined
via the "SERVER=" option, or in the registry under one of the following
values:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment\dL4EmailServer
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment\dL4EmailServer
or as the environment variable "DL4EMAILSERVER". After all email text
has been output and all attachments added, the email channel should be
CLOSEd to actually send the email. If the channel is CLEARed, the
driver will attempt to cancel the email.
Example:
Open #1,"(From=name@domain,AttachAs=Mime) nobody@dynamic.com" As "Email"
Print #1;"Test the email driver"
! Append the file "Filename" as an attachment
Add #1;"Filename"
Close #1
Please change the "From=" and destination email addresses to your
own email address before using this example.
Note: unlike early beta release versions, the email driver uses native
filenames for attachments.
o A "-u" option has been added to the BASIC DUMP command to produce
listings with line numbers even for programs that don't need line
numbers.
o A command history has been added to SCOPE so that the up and down
arrow keys can be used to recall previously typed commands. The user
can then repeat or edit the command.
o The BASIC EDIT command now supports using the up and down arrow keys
to select additional lines for editing after entering EDIT mode.
o The BASIC LOAD command has been extended to load programs from program
files as well as source files.
o A "tools" directory has been added to the standard runtime installation.
This directory contains the following utilities from the dL4 samples
package:
buildfi - utility to create Full-ISAM files
buildxf - utility to create Indexed-Contiguous files
checksum - utility to calculate 32-bit CRC file checksums
convert.prf - sample conversion profile
pgmcache - program cache utility
query - utility to display file type and characteristics
term - utility to display port status or terminate programs
o A "-t terminaltype" option has been added to "runc.exe" to select
the terminal definition file. This option is provided primarily for
compatibility with a similar option in dL4 for Unix, but might be
used to select a special terminal definition file for use with CGI
programming.
o Behavior change: to increase compatibility with the character oriented
window driver, independent windows can now be moved using the main
window coordinate grid. Independent windows without the "TITL" style
will no longer have a minimal border. In dL4 4.1, independent windows
could only be moved by the user dragging the title bar and a thin line
was used as a border for windows without the "TITL" style. Note: most
applications should use child windows (see below) rather than
independent windows.
o Behavior change: The child window open syntax:
OPEN #c,{"title","style",width,height,parent,column,row} As "Window"
has been extended so that 'parent', which is normally the channel
number of the parent window, can be -1 to indicate the main window.
This feature makes it unnecessary to use the CALL DUPCHANNEL intrinsic
to assign a channel number to the main window.
o Behavior change: the 'WCNUMBER' mnemonic now produces an edit box that
accepts signed floating point numbers rather than just non-negative
integers. The numbers must be in the format <".">
where the sign and decimal point are optional. Entering an illegal
character will be rejected. Note: the edit box may return a value
such as "-", ".", or "-." if the user starts to enter a legal number
but never adds the expected digits.
o A new driver, "TCP Listen Socket", has been added. The "Listen"
driver allows a dL4 program to be a server for socket requests. For
example, dL4 program S running on ServerA might use the "Listen"
driver to open a listening socket on port 9631 of ServerA.
Programs on other systems could then open sockets to port 9631 of
ServerA to exchange data with program S.
The "Listen" driver is used by opening a port number using the
"Listen" driver:
Open #1,":9631" As "TCP Listen Socket"
The open will return immediately. To accept the next queued
connection to that port, the program opens a socket using channel 1
as the parent socket:
Open #2,{1} As "Socket"
This open to channel 2 will not return until another program on the
local or a remote system opens a socket to port 9631 of the local
system. Once the open returns, channel 2 can be used to perform
normal socket read and write operations to transfer data from or to
the client program. When the transaction is finished, the server
program closes channel 2 and performs another open against parent
channel 1 to accept the next queued client request.
The example program below provides a date and time service on port
9631. While the program is running, any telnet utility can be used
to connect to port 9631 and receive the current date and time. The
current date and time will be printed to the client once every ten
seconds until the client closes the connection.
Dim I$[100],3%,I
Open #1,":9631" As "TCP Listen Socket"
I = 0
Do
Open #2,{1} As "Socket"
I = I + 1
Do
Try Print #2;"Session";I;Tim#(0);"\15\\12\"; Else Exit Do
Try Read #2,-1,-1,100;I$ Else Rem
If Spc(8) <> 123 Exit Do
Loop
Close #2
Loop
If multiple clients attempt to open port 9631 at the same time, only
one request will be accepted at a time. The other clients will be
queued by the operating system until the current connection on channel
2 is closed. The client program will receive an error if the total
number of queued requests exceeds an operating system defined number
(usually a small number). Client programs should be prepared to
retry opens if the server is busy.
Normally, a null server name (":9631") should be used to open a
listening socket on local system. The server name can be specified
to open a listening socket on a specific network interface.
The "opentime" option can be used to specify a maximum number of
seconds to wait when opening a new queued connection:
Open #2,{1,"opentime=10"} As "Socket"
A record locked error (error 123) will be generated if the open
times out.
Lists of pre-defined TCP port numbers can be found at many web sites
include www.iana.org. When writing a "listening" socket program, the
port number should not conflict with a port number used by a needed or
common pre-defined service. In most cases, the port number should be
greater than 1023 to avoid standard port numbers.
o A new SYSTEM statement mode has been implemented: SYSTEM 30 executes
system commands in a hidden window. This hidden window eliminates
the temporary command window created by the 'SYSTEM "command"'
statement. The new mode syntax is:
SYSTEM 30,CommandString$
SYSTEM 30,CommandString$,CommandStatus
where "CommandString$" is a string literal, variable or expression
and the optional "CommandStatus" is a numeric variable that receives
the operating system execution status of the command.
o A new special output macro can be defined in the "[OutputMacros]"
section of a terminal or printer definition file. The "Illegal"
macro can be used to define a single character to be output whenever
an illegal output character is output. Example:
[OutputMacros]
Illegal=?
o Enhancement: the socket driver now supports a "partial="
option to control whether a read terminates as soon as at least one
character has been read (default behavior) or waits until the
destination variable has been filled ("partial=true" behavior).
This option is specified in the option field when opening a socket.
Example:
Open #1,"(partial=true)server:servicename" As "Socket"
o Behavior change: the statement "INPUT TIM -1;String$" when used with
"OPTION INPUT TIMEOUT SIGNAL OFF" no longer generates an input timeout
error, it simply returns any available input characters into "String$".
o Behavior change: the Windows printer driver now prints all supplied
characters before reporting an illegal character error.
o Two previously optional intrinsic CALLs, GetGlobals() and SetGlobals()
are now standard CALLs and do not have to be installed using the
development kit.
o Enhancement: on Windows NT and Windows 2000 systems, the standard
input and output file handles of scopec.exe and runc.exe can now be
sockets.
o Enhancement: Unicode character columns in Microsoft SQL Server 7.0
tables can now be accessed. Due to runtime library restrictions,
the characters in those Unicode columns must be part of the ISO 8859-1
character set.
o Enhancement: the default keyboard configuration now defines the
shifted function keys as F13 through F24. For example, pressing the
"F1" key while holding down the shift key will generate an 'F13'
character. This change only effects the default configuration and
will not add the additional function keys to an existing keyboard
configuration (set if the Preferences->Keyboard menu item has been
used).
o Performance enhancement: the socket drivers now use Winsock 2
features to improve performance on systems supporting Winsock 2.
o Beta bug fixed: the email driver would process multiple addresses
incorrectly.
o Beta bug fixed: the 'NR' and 'WD' mnemonics did not update the MSC(33) and
MSC(40) function values (number of columns).
o Beta bug fixed: text printed to the email driver after adding an
attachment file corrupted the attachment.
o Beta bug fixed: CLEARing a channel open to the email driver caused a
5 minute hang.
o Beta bug fixed: normal and huge Indexed-Contiguous files could not
be opened at the same time.
o Bug fixed: if the debugger was entered when the main window was using
a grid coordinate system other than '1GRIDFONT', the "?", "WF", "WS",
and "WH" commands did not work correctly.
o Bug fixed: using CALL PROGRAMDUMP() after using the debugger
sometimes caused a memory violation.
o Bug fixed: duplicate structure definitions (DEF STRUCT statements
using the same structure name) were not reported as errors.
o Bug fixed: using 'WD', 'NR', or font mnemonics sometimes caused a
resource leak and eventually an error exit from scopew/runw.
o Bug fixed: if the standard output handle was a socket, scopew/runw
would sometimes hang.
o Bug fixed: a socket driver read or write without a timeout sometimes
waited forever even after I/O was complete.
o Bug fixed: writing an empty string ("") to the raw file driver caused
an error.
o Bug fixed: FoxPro files created outside of dL4 with duplicate keys
in a unique index could not have their index file rebuilt by the
DCC_REBUILDINDEX channel command.
o Bug fixed: the intrinsic CALL DateToJulian() did not work in modes
2 and 6. In addition, the CALL required a longer string than
necessary in 2 digit year modes and permitted too short a string in
4 digit year modes.
o Bug fixed: if protected characters and blinking characters were used
together, the blinking area was not always cleared by the 'CS', 'XX',
or other "clear" mnemonics.
o Bug fixed: identity fields in Microsoft SQL tables are now ignored
when performing a write to the table.
o Bug fixed: indices with identify fields are not used as the preferred
unique index. This eliminates a "unable to re-read record" error
after updating a record.
o Bug fixed: a selection in a list box or drop-down list box is
reported immediately if the value changed option is used.
o Bug fixed: GUI elements such as buttons sometimes returned incorrect
values when selected or changed.
o Bug fixed: if the table owner was specified when opening a table with
the Microsoft SQL Full-ISAM driver, the open failed.
o Bug fixed: selecting a value from a drop list of a GUI element was
not reported when requested by the WCACTION mnemonic.
o Bug fixed: if a FoxPro Full-ISAM file containing duplicate keys with
trailing blanks was re-indexed using a third-party tool, a memory
violation could occur when adding another duplicate key with trailing
blanks. This problem was most likely to occur when the keys were
completely blank.
o Bug fixed: opening a network printer without using the printer
driver ('OPEN #1,"\\server\printer"') returned a system error rather
than "No such driver".
o Bug fixed: a terminal or printer definition file that didn't define
any characters within the "[OutputMacros]" section could cause a memory
fault during output.
o Bug fixed: the statement 'CHAIN ""' will successfully exit a program
even if "OPTION CHAIN FAILURE IS ERROR" is used.
o Bug fixed: using a font size larger than the window caused a memory
violation.
o Bug fixed: typing a RETURN while a paste area was selected and a
input was active caused a memory violation.
o Bug fixed: using "Copy" from the "Edit" menu sometimes caused an
unnecessary and large increase in memory usage.
o Bug fixed: a memory violation could occur if a SAVE command was
executed after an immediate mode statement.
Mar 10 2000 (Release 4.1.1)
o Release 4.1.1 is a maintenance release that corrects various
problems and adds two new intrinsic CALLs to access the Windows
registry.
o Two new intrinsic CALLs, GetRegistry() and PutRegistry(), have
been added to provide access to the Windows registry.
BASIC syntax:
Call GetRegistry(KeyValuePath$, Value)
Call PutRegistry(KeyValuePath$, Value)
where:
"KeyValuePath$" is a string variable or expression that
specifies the registry key and value name to be read or
written. Backslashes must be used to separate each key
name in the path and the value name. The first key name
must be one of the following special keys:
"HKLM" or "Hkey_Local_Machine"
"HKCU" or "Hkey_Current_User"
"Value" is a numeric, string, or binary variable into which a
value will be read or from which the value will be written.
The type of "Value" must match the registry value (numeric for
DWORD values, string for REG_SZ values, and binary for binary
values).
Example:
Declare Intrinsic Sub GetRegistry, PutRegistry
! Write a string value into the registry current user key
Dim KeyVal$[100], NewId$[100], Id$[100]
KeyVal$ = "HKCU\\Software\\CompanyName\\Application\\UserId"
NewId$ = "John Parker"
Call PutRegistry(KeyVal$, NewId$)
! Read the value that was just written
Call GetRegistry(KeyVal$, Id$)
Print Id$
o The 'MH' (Move Home) mnemonic is now supported in edit boxes to move the
current position to the beginning of the text in the box.
o Behavior change: the intrinsic CALLs DateToJulian(), FormatDate(),
JulianToDate(), and VerifyDate() now ignore spaces preceding numeric
values rather than requiring zero filled values.
o Bug fixed: the input focus was not moved to the current window if
binary or activate-on-control-character input mode was used.
o Bug fixed: the ProgramDump() intrinsic CALL did not report the current
position correctly.
o Bug fixed: scroll bars weren't enabled or disabled at appropriate times
in multiline edit boxes ('WCEDIT' and 'WCTEXT' mnemonics).
o Bug fixed: line, rectangle, and ellipse drawing could cross window
boundaries.
o Bug fixed: a bad character error occurred when a WINDOW OPEN statement
was executed while using the character window driver rather than the
standard GUI window driver.
o Bug fixed: the MODIFY statement could apply, but not remove, read-only
protection on files in Windows 95/98 systems.
o Bug fixed: opening a directory path that ended with a backslash
character failed on Windows 95/98 systems.
Nov 17 1999 (Release 4.1)
o A new Windows Terminal driver has been implemented to support
graphical user interface programming. This driver will be the
default window driver in dL4 4.1. The character oriented driver
used in previous releases can be used by setting the runtime
parameter WINDOWDEFAULTS to the string value "type=char".
o The new Windows Terminal driver supports graphical user interface
programming using the following new mnemonics:
'WCBUTTON' - Create button
'WCCHECK' - Create check box
'WCRADIO' - Create radio button
'WCNUMBER' - Create numeric input box
'WCSTRING' - Create character input box
'WCPRIVATE' - Create character hidden input box
'WCLABEL' - Create a label for an input box
'WCTEXT' - Create multi-line character display box
'WCMEMO' - Create multi-line character input box
'WCLIST' - Create selection list box
'WCEDITLIST' - Create editable selection list box
'WCLISTDROP' - Create drop down selection list
'WCEDITDROP' - Create drop down editable list box
'WCMENU' - Create menu
'WCMENUACTION' - Create menu action item
'WCMENUCHECK' - Create menu check box item
'WCMENURADIO' - Create menu radio button item
'WCMENUSEP' - Create menu separator
'WCENDMENU' - End menu or sub-menu definition
'WCGROUP' - Group graphical elements
'WCSELECT' - Select current graphical element
'WCENABLE' - Enable user input/selection to/of element
'WCDISABLE' - Disable user input/selection to/of element
'WCQUERY' - Request graphical element to send value
'WCDELETE' - Delete a graphical element
'WCACTION' - Change action performed by input element
'WCFOCUS' - Set current focus to selected element
'WCMARK' - Mark or select item
'WCUNMARK' - Unmark or unselect item
'WCSUBMENU' - Create submenu
'WCSETFONT' - Set font for controls
Detailed documentation and example programs for these mnemonics can
be found in the dL4 4.1 GUI Tutorial. The tutorial can be downloaded
from www.dynamic.com.
o The Windows Terminal driver improves the appearance of dL4 applications
by creating all dL4 windows as separate operating system generated
windows. Independent windows opened on separate channels (as in the
statement , 'OPEN #1,{"Title","Style",w,h} As "Window"') have standard
title bars and can be moved independently of the main window. Child
windows, such as those created by the WINDOW OPEN statement, are
created within the parent window and use optional dialog style borders.
All dL4 windows support GUI programming mnemonics, mixing of multiple
fonts or font sizes, and enhanced line drawing.
o The new Windows Terminal driver implements an additional window style,
"MODAL". A "MODAL" window disables the main window and any previously
created modal window so that they can't be selected by the user. The
user is thus required to work in the modal window until the window
is closed by the application. When the modal window is closed, the
previously active modal window is enabled or, if none, the main window
is enabled. The "MODAL" style is ignored if applied to a child window
(any window created with a parent channel specified or by the WINDOW
OPEN statement).
Example:
OPEN #1,{"Help","TITL,SCRL,WRAP,MODAL",40,10} As "Window"
o The new Windows Terminal driver implements an additional window style,
"DIALOG". The "DIALOG" style creates a window that defaults to using
the standard system dialog colors. A non-child window using the
"DIALOG" style will also be modal.
Example:
OPEN #1,{"New Account","TITL,DIALOG",40,10} As "Window"
o The 'FONTCOLOR', 'BACKCOLOR', and 'PENCOLOR' mnemonics have been
enhanced to accept two special color codes in addition to RGB color
values. Code -1 selects the standard system text color for dialogs.
Code -2 selects the standard system background color for dialogs.
For example, printing '-1FONTCOLOR' would select the system dialog
text color as the current font color. These special color codes can
be used to match the dialog color scheme selected by the user.
o Two new mnemonics, 'BACTFN' and 'EACTFN', have been implemented to
enable or disable activate-on-function-key input. When activate-on-
function-key mode is enabled, an INPUT (or any read) from a terminal
or window will be terminated by typing any function key or the normal
"enter" keys. A function key is any keyboard sequence such as 'F4'
or 'PAGE DOWN' that generates a mnemonic character as input data.
Function keys such as 'INSERT' or "right arrow" that are used as
edit control keys will not terminate input in this mode. The program
can determine what character terminated an INPUT statement by using
the KEY clause. Example:
Print 'BACTFN';
Input Key TermChar$;"Prompt: "Response$
Print 'EACTFN';
If TermChar$ = 'F9' Goto DisplayHelp
If TermChar$ = 'MU' Goto EditHistory
o The coordinate grid in a window can now be changed from the default
character grid to fractions of a character, inch, or millimeter. The
'GRIDFONT', 'GRIDENGLISH', and 'GRIDMETRIC' mnemonics are used to
define the current coordinate grid. Please see the dL4 3.2 printer
description below for a detailed description of these mnemonics. The
current grid definition is used for column and row values returned
by the MSC() function. Note that a screen inch or millimeter may not
match an actual inch or millimeter. Each dL4 window has a separate
coordinate grid definition.
o Multiple fonts and font sizes can be mixed in a window using the
'FONTFACE' and 'FONTSIZE' mnemonics. Please see the dL4 3.2 printer
description below for a detailed description of these mnemonics. Each
dL4 window has a separate current font definition.
o The LINE statement and related mnemonics can now be used to draw lines
at any angle in a window. Previous versions of dL4 were restricted to
horizontal or vertical lines.
o The 'ELLIPSE' mnemonic can be used in a window to draw an ellipse
bounded by a specified rectangle. For example, if the coordinate
grid was defined in tenths of an inch ('100GRIDENGLISH'), the string
'40,20,60,40 ELLIPSE' would draw a 2.0 inch circle centered at 5 inches
from left and 3 inches down on the screen.
o The 'PENWEIGHT' mnemonic can be used to set the thickness of lines
drawn in a window. For example, using a one tenth character coordinate
grid ('10GRIDFONT'), the string '2PENWEIGHT' would make the line width
equal to one fifth of the character height. Each dL4 window has a
separate current pen weight definition.
o The 'PENSTYLE' mnemonic can be used to set the style of lines drawn in
a window. A mnemonic argument of 0 (the default) selects solid lines,
1 selects dashed lines, and 2 selects dotted lines. As an example,
printing '1PENSTYLE' selects dashed lines. Each dL4 window has a
separate current pen style definition.
o Spaces can now be used in filenames and directory paths. Such
filenames and paths must be enclosed in quotes. Examples:
save "program name with spaces"
OPEN #1,"''Filename with Spaces''"
Note that quotation marks in dL4 string constants are represented
by two consecutive single quotes. Quoted filenames are supported by
all statements, all commands, the LIBSTRING runtime parameter, and the
LUMAP runtime parameter.
o A new intrinsic function ENCFNM$() has been added to dL4 to add
quotation marks to a filename if required. The function can be
invoked with either one or two string arguments. With two arguments,
the first argument will be treated as a directory prefix to be added
to the second filename argument.
o Portable Formatted or Portable Contiguous files larger than 2 gigabytes
in size can now be created on Windows NT systems. Such files are built
using the BUILD AS option to specify the "Portable Huge Formatted",
"Portable Huge Contiguous", "Universal Huge Formatted", or "Universal
Huge Contiguous" drivers. These are new file types using formatted or
contiguous file behavior. "Huge" Indexed files will be supported in a
future release of dL4.
Example:
Build #1,"[1:200]Filename" As "Portable Huge Contiguous"
To share huge files across a network, both the file server and the client
systems must support large files. Note: release 6 of UniBasic does not
support "Universal Huge" files.
o The "U" option letter ('BUILD #1,"[10:100]file"') can be used to
select the "Universal" format when creating a Portable Formatted,
Contiguous, or Indexed file.
o A TCP/IP socket driver has been implemented. A connection can be
created using an OPEN statement similar to:
OPEN #c,"system:port" As "Socket"
where "system" is a network system name or IP address (xx.xx.xx.xx)
and "port" is a service name or port number. Character and binary
data can be read or written. The following example program reads
the current date and time from a Unix host system:
10 Dim L$[100]
20 Open #1,"unixhostname:daytime" As "Socket"
30 Read #1;L$
40 Close #1
50 Print L$
o An OPTION DEFAULT statement has been added to dL4 to set options for
all program units in a program module (file).
o A new option, "DIALECT BITS", has been added to select the standard
BITS options. The statement "OPTION DIALECT BITS" is equivalent to
the following group of option statements:
OPTION FILE ACCESS RAW,FILE UNIT IS BYTES,DISPLAY AUTO LF OFF
OPTION CHAIN FAILURE IS ERROR,CLOSE FAILURE IS IGNORED
OPTION IF BY STATEMENTS,INPUT TIMEOUT SIGNAL OFF,STRINGS RAW
OPTION OPEN AUTO CLOSE ON,RETURN BY LINES
Note that the arithmetic option, "BITS DECIMAL", is not set. Two
additional options, "DIALECT IRIS" and "DIALECT STANDARD", have been
added to select the "IRIS SUBSCRIPTS ON" or default options.
o A new arithmetic option, "BITS DECIMAL", has been added to select
BITS numeric types. Note that BITS numeric types are not portable.
o A new option, "AUTO DIM OFF", has been added to aid in detecting
misspelled variable names. When a program that uses "OPTION AUTO DIM
OFF" is SAVEd, error messages will be generated for each variable
that is not declared in a DIM statement, COM statement, CHAIN READ
statement, or parameter list. A "-u" option has been added to the
SCOPE CHECK command and LOADSAVE utility to detect undeclared
variables in program that do not use the "AUTO DIM OFF" option.
o The OPTION FLUSH AFTER STATEMENT ON option causes all write statements
to flush the record buffer even if the statement does not unlock the
current record. This option provides compatibility with programs that
use ROPEN to read locked records and expect those records to contain
updates that are currently in progress. This record flushing option
is implemented for Formatted, Indexed Contiguous, and Full-ISAM files.
Any driver that does not implement the DCC_SYNC operation will
silently ignore this option. This option should only be used when
necessary for compatibility with existing programs.
o The OPTION RECORD LOCK TIMEOUT N option sets the default timeout period
for file and database drivers. The number value N is the number of
tenth seconds to wait before reporting a record lock error. The value
of N must be between -1 (default, wait forever) and 36000 inclusive.
This option should be used in converted programs that used the UniBasic
LOCKRETRY feature. The option is supported by the Formatted, Indexed
Contiguous, and Full-ISAM file drivers. Example:
Option Record Lock Timeout 100
Dim S$[40]
Open #1,"File"
Read #1,3;S$ ! timeout not specified, will wait up to 10 seconds
o The SYSTEM 28 statement has been extended to search a program defined
application registry key for string values if those values are not
in the environment. The application registry key is searched under
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software and then HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software. The
statement SYSTEM 29 is used to set the current application registry key.
For example, the statements
SYSTEM 29,"SupplierName\\AppName"
V$ = "Parameter"
SYSTEM 28,V$
would attempt to read the string value "Parameter" from the environment
and then, if not found, the following registry locations:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\SupplierName\AppName\Parameter
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\SupplierName\AppName\Parameter
Note that SYSTEM 28 does not access the registry unless SYSTEM 29 has
been used to define a registry key. This mechanism provides a portable
mechanism to access application parameters similar to that used for
dL4 runtime parameters.
o The command "RETURN" has been added to the debugger. This command
causes execution to continue until the current procedure exits.
o The command " GO" can now be used in the debugger to
continue execution at a specific line. The line must be part of the
current procedure.
o A DCC_SYNC command has been implemented in the Portable Formatted
driver to flush the record buffer without releasing the current
record lock. A DCC_SYNC command can be issued by a user program via
the CHANNEL statement ("Channel 20,#c;").
o The SAVE file revision has been changed from 2.8 to 2.11 in order to
support new statements in dL4 4.1. Full upward compatibility is
provided, so program files created by earlier versions of dL4 can
still be used. Programs created by this release of dL4 cannot be
used by earlier releases of dL4.
o The maximize button of the main window now enlarges the window to
the size of the canvas.
o If installed from an administrator account of a Windows NT system,
dL4 will be created as a common program group.
o Behavior change: a CANCEL command is now automatically performed if
required to perform an edit, RENUMBER, or LABEL command. A warning
message is printed to inform the user that the program context has
been deleted. Previous versions of dL4 simply displayed an error
message and required the user to explicitly CANCEL the program.
o Behavior change: the KILL statement and the SCOPE KILL command now
delete unsupported file types as raw files rather than returning an
error.
o Behavior change: the background window created by a WINDOW ON or
WINDOW OPEN statement is forced behind all other windows including
those opened on channels (this is a change only for non-windowed
terminals: dL4 for Windows, dL4Term, and "[Settings] StartupInWindow"
terminals always followed this rule).
o Three new drivers have been added to dL4 to create Universal Indexed
Contiguous and Universal Formatted files. These drivers are
variants of the Portable file drivers with character set, numeric
maps, and other options set to match the format of Universal
files. New driver names:
"Universal Indexed-Contiguous"
"Universal Formatted"
"Universal Contiguous"
o The ERRSET, ERRSTM, ESCSET, ESCSTM, INTSET, and related statements
can now be used in external procedures.
o Two new mnemonics 'LITNUL' and 'LITCR' have been defined. These
mnemonics, if defined in a terminal or printer definition file, can be
used to output 0x0000 and 0x000D characters without translation.
o A new mnemonic, 'EUROSIGN', has been defined to represent the Unicode
Euro currency character 0x20AC.
o The Portable Indexed File and Universal Index File drivers now allow
opening files created with an index block size of up to 2048 bytes
(ISAMSECT equal to 16). A new runtime parameter, ISAMSECT, can be
used to specify the index block size of newly created files as a
multiple of 128 bytes. For example, an ISAMSECT value of 16 would
cause new indexed files to use an index block size of 2048 bytes (16
times 128 bytes). The default index block size is unchanged and has
a value of 1024 bytes (equivalent to an ISAMSECT value of 8). The new
ISAMMAXSECT runtime parameter can be similarly used to change the
maximum openable index block size of 2048 bytes to any multiple of 128.
The default index block size should be adequate for all uses, but, if a
different value is used, a power of 2 (4, 8, 16, 32, ...) is
recommended.
o Two new open options have been added to the Windows printer driver.
The LANDSCAPE and PORTRAIT options, which accept a boolean value, are
used to specify page orientation. The value will override the printer
default or user selected orientation. The options are ignored if the
Windows printer driver does not support selection of orientation.
SELECTLP.BAT modified to request landscape orientation:
rem dl4opts=openas=selected page printer,landscape=true
rem
rem dL4 selected by dialog printer script modified to request
rem landscape orientation
SELECTLP.BAT modified to request portrait orientation:
rem dl4opts=openas=selected page printer,portrait=true
rem
rem dL4 selected by dialog printer script modified to request
rem portrait orientation
o The WIDTHI, WIDTHM, LENGTHI, LENGTHM, and FORMCODE options can now
be used with all versions of the page printer driver. Note that the
options will have no effect unless they are supported by the Windows
operating system printer driver.
o The "Page Printer" driver now supports the graphics characters ('Gn')
when using standard Windows 95 fonts (the Windows NT fonts always
supported graphics).
o In the "Preferences->Font" dialog, the BOLD style can be selected as
the standard font. Using the BOLD style as the default font may make
bold characters ('BBOLD') identical to non-bold characters.
o Behavior change: the READRECORD and WRITERECORD statements now obey
the FILE ACCESS RAW option.
o Beta behavior change: creating a graphical element (for example,
using 'WCBUTTON') with the same element number as an existing element
now overwrites the old element rather than returning an error code.
Overwriting any part of a menu will cause the entire menu to be
deleted.
o Beta behavior change: the 'XX' mnemonic now deletes all graphical
elements on a window including menus.
o Fix bug: the Microsoft SQL Full-ISAM driver updated incorrect rows
if a table had a clustered index and at least one non-unique index.
o Fix bug: PCHR$() ignored any parameters preceding a string value.
o Fix bug: the LOADSAVE "-l" OSN option ignored illegal OSN indices and,
on some platforms, caused memory violations when valid OSN indices
were specified. Note that the "-l" option uses an OSN index and not
an actual OSN number.
o Fix bug: the printer driver incorrectly printed graphic characters
with repeat counts ('5GH').
o Beta bug fixed: the socket driver now translates numeric IP addresses
without first attempting a name lookup.
o Beta bug fixed: the socket driver reported some open errors incorrectly
as BE_SYSERRNO.
o Beta bug fixed: binary input ('IOBI') did not work on non-dL4Term
terminals.
o Beta bug fixed: output of a character with more parameters than the
maximum number of supported parameters sometimes caused a memory
fault.
o Beta bug fixed: the root window was always sized to the canvas rather
than window size.
o Beta bug fixed: blinking text on a parent window was visible in any
overlapping child window.
o Beta bug fixed: repeat counts ('5GH') were ignored when used with
printable characters.
Jun 18 1999 (Maintenance release 3.2.1)
o Release 3.2.1 is a maintenance release that corrects a problem in
the Windows printer driver and adds some additional printer open
options.
o A bug in the Windows printer driver that caused the font size and
other font characteristics to return to their default values after
each new page has been fixed.
o Five new open options have been added to the Windows printer driver.
The WIDTHI, WIDTHM, LENGTHI, and LENGTHM options can be used to
specify the page length in inches or millimeters. The FORMCODE
option can be used to specify a numeric page size form code. The
effects of these options vary depending on the Windows printer driver
used for output. The options should not be used unless necessary
and values should be chosen to match forms supported by the target
printer or printers. These options can only be used with the Windows
default or user selected printer driver.
SELECTLP.BAT modified to request legal form paper:
rem dl4opts=openas=selected page printer,widthi=8.5,lengthi=14
rem
rem dL4 selected by dialog printer script modified to request
rem use of 8.5 inch wide by 14 inch long legal forms.
SELECTLP.BAT modified to request 14 7/8 by 11 paper:
rem dl4opts=openas=selected page printer,formcode=39
rem
rem dL4 selected by dialog printer script modified to request
rem use of 14 7/8 inch wide by 11 inch long fanfold forms.
Common page size codes for use with the FORMCODE option:
1 Letter 8 1/2 x 11 in
2 Letter Small 8 1/2 x 11 in
3 Tabloid 11 x 17 in
4 Ledger 17 x 11 in
5 Legal 8 1/2 x 14 in
6 Statement 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 in
7 Executive 7 1/4 x 10 1/2 in
39 US Std Fanfold 14 7/8 x 11 in
Jan 26 1999 (Release 3.2)
o The new page printer driver makes it possible to output to any
Windows printer. The driver can be opened to a specific printer
name, to the system default printer, or, via a dialog box, to a
user selected printer. Because Windows is performing all low
level formatting, the driver does not require any device specific
configuration such as a printer definition file. The printer can
even be a fax service if a Microsoft or third party fax driver
has been installed as a printer.
The page printer driver uses a page oriented rather than line
oriented output model. Programs can use cursor positioning ("@x,y")
to output anywhere on the current page. The page is not printed
until a line scrolls off the bottom of the page, an 'FF' or 'CS'
mnemonic is output, or the driver is closed.
Both forms ("@x;" and "@x,y;") of absolute cursor positioning use
grid units. The default grid is the traditional character row and
column, but it can also be set to be in inches or millimeters. The
grid definition is controlled by the 'GRIDENGLISH', 'GRIDMETRIC',
and 'GRIDFONT' mnemonics. Each of these mnemonics take a single
numeric parameter that determines the resolution of the grid.
Column zero and row zero of the grid are always defined to be the
upper left corner of the printable area of the page (the printable
area does not include any unprintable margin space).
'GRIDENGLISH' Set the coordinate grid to thousandths of an
inch times the parameter ('nGRIDENGLISH') from
the upper left corner. The mnemonic string
'100GRIDENGLISH' sets the grid to tenths of an
inch and so the cursor position "@35,51" would
position to a point 3.5 inches to the
right and 5.1 inches down from the upper left
corner.
'GRIDMETRIC' Set the coordinate grid to hundredths of a
millimeter times the parameter ('nGRIDMETRIC')
from the upper left corner. The mnemonic
string '1000GRIDMETRIC' sets the grid to
centimeters and so the cursor position "@6,10"
would position to a point 6 centimeters to the
right and 10 centimeters down from the upper
left corner.
'GRIDFONT' Set the coordinate grid to the line height and
average character width of the current font
divided by the parameter ('nGRIDFONT') from
the upper left corner. The mnemonic string
"10GRIDFONT" sets the grid to tenths of the
line height and character width. The cursor
position "@105,75" would position to 10.5
columns to the right and 7.5 lines down from
the upper left corner. Note that the grid is
based on the current font and will not change
if the font size is changed unless another
'GRIDFONT" mnemonic is output. When using
variable width fonts, the column size is based
on the average character width.
The current font can be changed by using the 'FONTFACE' mnemonic.
This mnemonic has a single string parameter which is the font
name such as "Courier" or "Helvetica". A mnemonic string parameter
is generated by using the PCHR$() function with a string argument.
The font size is controlled by the 'FONTSIZE' mnemonic which has
a numeric argument specifying the size in grid units. Assuming
the grid is defined in characters (the default), then the
statement:
PRINT #1;PChr$("Helvetica");'Fontface 3Fontsize';
would select "Helvetica" as the current font sized at three times
the row height for the printer on channel 1. If the printer does
not support "Helvetica", an error may occur, but usually the
Windows printer driver will choose a substitute font. Character
sizing is approximate and determined by Windows algorithms.
The font determines not only the appearance of characters, but also
which characters can be printed and how they are positioned. Most
Windows fonts are of variable pitch and so different characters will
have different widths. If characters, particularly spaces, are used
for exact positioning, then a fixed pitch font should be used.
'FONTFACE' Set the font to the specified font name. The
font name must be specified as a string
parameter using the PCHR$() function as in the
following statement:
PRINT #1;PCHR$("Times");'FONTFACE'
'FONTSIZE' Set the font size to the parameter ('nFONTSIZE')
times the grid height unit.
The printer driver supports drawing lines and rectangles. All
drawing is performed using the current "pen" whose width and color
is set by the 'PENWEIGHT' and 'PENCOLOR' mnemonics. The example
below draws a three inch by four inch rectangle with a line drawn
between the upper left and lower right corners:
! Select a tenth inch grid
Print #1;'100GridEnglish';
! Set the pen color to blue with a width of .2 inches
Print #1;'255PenColor 2PenWeight';
! Draw 3 by 4 inch rectangle
Box #1;@10,10;To @50,40; ! or Print #1;'10,10,50,40Rect';
! Draw a line between the corners
Line #1;@10,10;To @50,40;! or Print #1;@10,10;'50,40LineTo';
'PENCOLOR' Set the pen color to the parameter ('rPENCOLOR')
where the parameter is an RGB color value.
'PENWEIGHT' Set the pen width to the parameter ('nPENWEIGHT')
times the grid unit.
'LINETO' Draw a line using the current pen using the
current position as one point and the specified
coordinates ('x,yLINETO') as the ending point.
'RECTTO' Draw a rectangle using the current pen using the
current position as one corner and the specified
coordinates ('x,yRECTTO') as the opposite corner.
'RECT' Draw a rectangle using the current pen and the
specified coordinates ('x1,y1,x2,y2RECT').
'ELLIPSE' Draw an ellipse using the current pen to fit the
rectangle defined by the specified coordinates
('x1,y1,x2,y2ELLIPSE').
The following mnemonics are used to change the current position
on the page or print the current page:
"@x;" Position to grid column x
"@x,y;" Position to grid column x and grid row y
'MH' Move to upper left corner of page
'MR' Move right one average character width
'ML' Move left one average character width
'BS' Move left one average character width
'RI' Move up one line
'BK' Move to column zero
'CR' Move to column zero of the next line
'LF' Move to current column on the next line
'MD' Move to current column on the next line
'FF' Print current page and move to the upper left
corner of the next page.
'CS' Print current page and move to the upper left
corner of the next page.
The following mnemonics are used to change attributes of the
current font:
'BI' Print in italic mode
'EI' End italic mode
'BSO' Print in strike out mode
'ESO' End strike out mode
'BU' Print in underline mode
'EU' End underline mode
'BBOLD' Print in bold mode
'EBOLD' End bold mode
'BSUB' Print in subscript position relative to the
current font height
'ESUB' End subscript mode
'BSUP' Print in superscript position relative to the
current font height
'ESUP' End superscript mode
'BC' Print in compressed mode (.6 times default
font size)
'EC' End compressed mode
'BX' Print in expanded print mode (twice default
font size)
'EX' End expanded print mode
The following mnemonics are used to change the current font and
background colors:
'GN' Set font color to green
'RE' Set font color to red
'YE' Set font color to yellow
'BL' Set font color to blue
'MA' Set font color to magenta
'CY' Set font color to cyan
'WH' Set font color to white
'BLACK' Set font color to black
'FONTCOLOR' Set the font color to the parameter ('rFONTSIZE')
where the parameter is an RGB color value.
'BACKCOLOR' Set the background color to the parameter
('rBACKCOLOR') where the parameter is an RGB color
value.
'RESETCOLOR' Reset font, pen, and background color to default
By default, the printer driver uses the "Courier New" font with a
size of 1/6 inch. The default font and size can be changed by using
the "FONT=name" and "FONTSIZE=size_in_points" open options. The
following OPEN statement sets the default font to "Arial Narrow" with
a size of 10/72 inches:
OPEN #1,{"","FONT=Arial Narrow,FONTSIZE=10"} As "Default Page Printer"
The printer driver can be opened to a specific Windows printer name,
to the default Windows printer, or to a printer selected by the user
in a dialog box. To open a specific printer, use the "Page Printer"
driver:
OPEN #1,{"Printer Name","options") As "Page Printer"
To open the default Windows printer, use the "Default Page Printer"
driver:
OPEN #1,{"","options") As "Default Page Printer"
To allow the user to select the printer in a dialog box, use the
"Selected Page Printer" driver:
OPEN #1,{"","options") As "Selected Page Printer"
A standard Windows printer selection dialog box will displayed so
that the user can select a printer. If the user cancels the
dialog, a "File not found" will occur. In all three drivers, a
"File not found" error will be generated if the printer does not
exist.
o The Page Printer driver provides three special GET statement commands
to retrieve the current page size and margins. All three commands
return a value of -1 for unknown values. The statement
GET #c,-1399;Width,Height
returns the width and height of the printable area of a page in the
units of the current coordinate grid.
The statement
GET #c,-1398;Left,Right
returns the left and right margins of the page in the units of the
current coordinate grid.
The statement
GET #c,-1397;Top,Bottom
returns the top and bottom margins of the page in the units of the
current coordinate grid (see the GRIDENGLISH, GRIDMETRIC, and GRIDFONT
mnemonics in the Page Printer driver description above). These
commands can only be used on a channel open to a Page Printer driver.
o Two new channel functions, CHF(1200+c) and CHF(1300+c), have been
defined to return the current column and row positions. The values
are returned in the units of the current coordinate grid (see the
GRIDENGLISH, GRIDMETRIC, and GRIDFONT mnemonics in the Page Printer
driver description above).
o A new driver, "Serial Terminal", has been added to allow programs to
open serial communication devices to a Window class driver. Using this
driver, input and output to a serial device will follow the same rules
as screen and keyboard I/O. By default, end of line characters will
terminate input, input edit characters such as backspace will be
processed, and data characters will be echoed. The standard 'IOxx'
mnemonics can be used to control input characteristics. Similarly,
cursor positioning can be used on output if mnemonics are defined in a
terminal definition file.
The "Serial Terminal" driver accepts the options listed below when
opened:
Option Argument Use
TERM Filename or path Specify terminal definition file
to be used with device
SPEED Numeric ("9600") Set device dependent line speed
DATA String ("8n1", "7e1") Set device dependent data format
CTSFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable CTS output flow control
DSRFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable DSR output flow control
RTSFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable RTS input flow control
XONFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable XOFF/XON output flow
control
If not specified, all options except TERM use the current system default
value of the device. If the TERM option is not specified, the driver
uses a simple default terminal definition in which carriage return is
recognized as an input terminator.
Example:
F$ = "(speed=38400,data=8n1,term=c:\dl4\term\vt100)com1"
Open #1,F$ As "Serial Terminal"
o The pipe driver has been extended to allow redirection of I/O to
a specified driver. "OPENAS=name" or "BUILDAS=name" options
can be placed in the script "dl4opts" line to specify that an open
of the script should cause an OPEN or BUILD using the driver
"name". The options "PATH=string" and "OPTIONS=string" can be used
to specify the path or options value to be used by the OPEN or
BUILD.
For example, the statement 'OPEN #2,"$printer"' opens the script
"printer.bat" for output on channel 2. If "printer.bat" begins
with the line:
rem dl4opts=openas=default page printer
then output to channel 2 would be directed to the default Windows
printer.
o Two printer scripts, dfltlp.bat and selectlp.bat, are now supplied
and installed with dL4. The default Windows printer can be opened
as "$dfltlp". A user selected Windows printer can be opened as
"$selectlp" which will cause a printer dialog to be displayed.
Examples:
OPEN #2,"$dfltlp"
OPEN #99,"$selectlp"
o The new ForcePortDump() intrinsic CALL causes a target port to abort
execution of the current dL4 program, produce a dump listing file, and
then exit from dL4. For debugging purposes, it is also possible to
trigger a dump listing without causing the program to exit. The dump
output is identical to that of the ProgramDump() intrinsic CALL and
lists the current execution location of the target program, the CALL
stack, current variable values, the status of open channels, and
various other values. Under Unix, the caller of ForcePortDump() must
either be the same user as that of the target port or be a privileged
user such as root.
BASIC syntax:
Call ForcePortDump(Mode, PortNumber, Status)
where:
"Mode" is a numeric variable or expression that controls the
type of dump produced. If "Mode" is zero, the target port
will be requested to produce a dump and then exit. If "Mode"
is equal to one, the port will be requested to produce a dump
and then continue (this should only be used for debugging
because it will interrupt any I/O in progress).
"PortNumber" is a numeric variable or expression containing
the port number of the target dL4 program.
"Status" is a numeric variable that receives the status of call.
The value of "Status" will be set as follows by any call that
doesn't generate an error 38:
0 Successful, the selected port exists and a dump
command was sent to the port. This status does
not guarantee that the port actually aborted or
generated a dump file.
1 Error, the specified port does not exist.
All parameters are required. Error 38, "Error detected by
CALLed subroutine", will be generated if an incorrect number
of parameters, parameter type, or parameter value is passed to
ForcePortDump.
To limit attacks on system security, the dump output is controlled by
the DL4PORTDUMP runtime parameter. If DL4PORTDUMP is not defined for
the target port, then ForcePortDump() will not generate a dump. On
Unix, DL4PORTDUMP is an environment variable that must be set in each
users environment (perhaps set by the .profile script). Under Windows,
the DL4PORTDUMP value can be supplied either as an environment variable
or as a string value in the registry:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment\dL4PortDump
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment\dL4PortDump
In any form, DL4PORTDUMP is the filename to which the dump will be
written. DL4PORTDUMP must be an absolute path; for example, under
Windows, DL4PORTDUMP might be defined as "D:\Dumps\DumpFile.txt". The
following macro values can be used in a DL4PORTDUMP path string:
%PORT% Port number of target port
%DATE% Current date ("YYMMDD")
%TIME% Current time ("HHMMSS")
%name% Value of environment variable "name"
These macro values, if used in the DL4PORTDUMP path, will be replaced
by their current values. For example, if DL4PORTDUMP was defined with
the value "D:\Dumps\%PORT%.txt" and a dump was triggered on port 15,
then the dump would be written to the file "D:\Dumps\15.txt".
o The ProgramDump() intrinsic CALL has been enhanced to use the
DL4PORTDUMP runtime parameter, as described above, if the filename
parameter is not specified.
o A new command has been added to the BASIC mode of SCOPE. The command
"PDUMP filename" outputs a ProgramDump() style listing of the current
program status to "filename".
o A new mode has been added to the PORT statement. PORT mode 5
returns the current line number and library name executing on a
specified port. For example, the statement:
PORT P,5,S,L$
will return in L$ the current line number of the program running on
port P. If the program is executing a line in a library, then L$
will have the format "library:line#" where "library" is the name of
the library. As with PORT mode 3, a status is returned in S
indicating success (zero) or failure (one, port not attached).
o The following intrinsic calls have been added:
Call AvPort(PORTNUM {,MINPORT {,MAXPORT}})
Call CheckDigits(STRING$)
Call CheckNumber(STRING$)
Call ConvertCase(MODE, STRING$ {,START})
Call DateToJulian({MODE,} DATE$ {,CONVERTED_DATE$ {,STATUS}})
Call DecToOct(NUMBER, OUTPUT_NUMBER_OR_STRING_VARIABLE)
Call Echo(MODE)
Call FindF(PATH$, STATUS)
Call FormatDate(DATE$ {,CONVERTED_DATE$ {,STATUS {,MODE}}})
Call JulianToDate({MODE,} JULIAN$ {,CONVERTED_DATE$ {,STATUS}})
Call MiscStr({M,}S${,...})
Call ReadRef(CHAN, MODE)
Call Rename(LU, OLDNAME$, NEWNAME$, CHANNEL, STATUS)
Call String(MODE,...)
Call StringSearch({F,}A${,S},T$,P{,N{,S1{,T1}}})
Call Time(T$)
Call VerifyDate(DATE$ {,CONVERTED_DATE$ {,STATUS {,MODE}}})
These calls are UniBasic compatible and replace all of the functions
in the oldcalls.bas and depcalls.bas libraries of dl4.samples except
for CALL DYNWIND(). The date oriented CALLs, like all other dL4 date
functions, use "OPTION DATE FORMAT NATIVE" and the native operating
system locale configuration (such as the LANG environment variable)
instead of the UniBasic "EUROPEAN" and "DATESEP" environment variables.
In all programs that use oldcalls.lib or depcalls.lib, each occurrence
of "DECLARE EXTERNAL SUB" must be changed to "DECLARE INTRINSIC SUB"
for the new calls. In addition, any "EXTERNAL LIB" statement for
oldcalls.lib or depcalls.lib should be removed, or, if CALL DYNWIND()
is needed, all of the new intrinsic calls should be deleted in
oldcalls.lib. For example, in a program that used the DATETOJULIAN
and JULIANTODATE calls, the lines:
Declare External Sub DateToJulian,JulianToDate
External Lib "OLDCALLS.LIB"
would be changed to:
Declare Intrinsic Sub DateToJulian,JulianToDate
Programs that are not changed will run, but they will continue to use
the procedures in oldcalls.lib or depcalls.lib. Any conversion
profile ("convert.prf") should be changed to use the new intrinsic
calls.
o The record number -4 has been defined in the text file driver to
position to the end of the file. A program can append to a text file
with a statement such as this:
PRINT #1,-4;"message"
o The SCOPE DUMP command has been extended to support output to the
pipe driver. The command "DUMP $name" will list the current program
to the pipe device "$name".
o The 'IOCI' (clear typeahead buffer) mnemonic is now supported for dL4
sessions using serial devices as standard input or output.
o A new window driver registry value "ProtectedNotDim" has been added
to control whether protected characters are displayed with the
"DIMmed" attribute. Disabling the "DIMmed" attribute makes it possible
to fully control the color of protected characters using the normal
color mnemonics such as 'BL' or 'FONTCOLOR'. This feature can be
configured using the "Window" dialog of the "Preferences" menu.
o A new window driver registry value "TabBySpacing" has been added to
control whether the PRINT TAB() function clears intermediate
characters to spaces while moving to the specified position. This
feature can be configured using the "Window" dialog of the
"Preferences" menu.
o The 'IOTE' (toggle echo) mnemonic is now supported in dL4 windows.
o Behavior change: when writing strings with the raw file driver, any
'ALIGN' or 'MOVETO' mnemonics are now expanded before performing the
write. This supports the use of TAB and comma field separation in
PRINT statements to the raw file driver.
o Bug fixed: the LET command in the debugger ignored string subscripts
if the first subscript was one. Thus, the command 'LET A$[1,1]="X"'
was treated as 'LET A$="X"' replacing the string value rather than
just the first character.
o Bug fixed: if I/O was interrupted, the raw file driver entered a
tight loop until the I/O completed.
o Bug fixed: pfilter would fail if an OPEN and CLOSE of a pipe occurred
without any output and a CLOSE string was defined in the printer
definition file.
o Beta bug fixed: the left and top margins used by the Page Printer
driver were incorrect.
o Beta bug fixed: the argument order of the intrinsic CALL READREF was
reversed.
o Beta bug fixed: PORT mode 5 sometimes returned a very large line
number if the program on the selected port had exited.
o Beta bug fixed: intrinsic CALL STRINGSEARCH would fail to find a
match if the match occurred at the very end of the dimensioned
size of the source string.
Nov 9 1998 (Release 3.1.1)
o Two new standard intrinsic functions, MD5? and AddMD5?, has been
added to dL4. MD5?() returns the MD5 checksum code of the first
argument which must be either a binary or a string variable. The
MD5 checksum is returned as a 16 byte binary value. An optional
second binary argument can be used to pass an intermediate value
from AddMD5?(). This allows a combined checksum to be calculated.
Checksums are calculated against the DIMed size of strings so that
null (0) characters can be included in the checksum. To avoid this,
simply pass the string with subscripts. So that string values will
produce the same checksums on all platforms, each UNICODE character
of a string is forced into a most-significant-byte first ordering
for calculation.
BASIC syntax:
Dim chksum?[16], intermediate?[128]
chksum? = MD5?(var)
chksum? = MD5?(var,intermediate?)
intermediate? = AddMD5?(var)
intermediate? = AddMD5?(var,intermediate?)
o Several open options have been added to the RAW driver for use with
serial devices as shown below:
Option Argument Use
SPEED Numeric ("9600") Set device dependent line speed
DATA String ("8n1", "7e1") Set device dependent data format
CTSFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable CTS output flow control
DSRFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable DSR output flow control
RTSFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable RTS input flow control
XONFLOW Boolean ("T" or "F") Enable XOFF/XON output flow
control
For example, the statement
OPEN #1,"[1:1](speed=19200,data=8o1,xonflow=t)COM1" As "Raw"
would open the COM1 serial port at 19200 baud with 8 bit characters,
odd parity, 1 stop bit, and XON/XOFF output flow control.
o MSC(43) has been defined and implemented as returning the current
screen row.
o SPC(19) now returns a license value as a 32-bit number instead of
-1. In the current implementation, the license value is the
license number.
o Behavior change: if an OPEN fails because a file header is locked,
the error "File is open elsewhere" will be returned instead of
"Illegal driver operation".
o Bug fixed: after a screen area was selected with the mouse, input
into that area was truncated.
o Bug fixed: the pipe driver would sometimes return a "Driver resource
exhausted" error when a non-existent script or program was opened
under Windows 95/98.
o Bug fixed: dL4 sessions could not be evicted or interrupted if a
read from a serial port was in progress.
o Bug fixed: an error while evaluating a single line function would
not trigger error handling and could cause an address violation.
o Bug fixed: repeatedly CHAINing or CALLing to a program using a "./"
or "../" in the program filename caused the filename to exceed the
filename length limit and the CHAIN/CALL to fail because the program
could not be found. All "./" and "../" strings are now removed from
paths for all program and data file access after properly adjusting
the paths.
o Bug fixed: CLOSE/CLEAR statements using the RAW driver would sometimes
pause for 5 seconds.
o Bug fixed: OPENing a printer script immediately after CLOSEing it
sometimes caused loss of output data.
o Bug fixed: record zero in a Portable Indexed Contiguous file, once
deallocated, could not be reallocated.
o Bug fixed: deallocating non-existent records in a Portable Indexed
Contiguous file sometimes caused the COUNTUSED option to be disabled.
o Bug fixed: paths using ":" as a directory separator were not mapped
correctly by LUMAP.
o Bug fixed: opening a non-directory using the directory driver did not
generate an error.
Mar 20 1998 (Release 3.1)
o This release requires an SSN authorized for release 3 of dL4.
Without such an SSN, dL4 can only be used in single user demo mode.
o The SAVE file revision has been changed to 2.8 in order to
support new features of dL4 3.1. A new program file format also
significantly lowers program load overhead. Full upward
compatibility is provided, so program files created by earlier
versions of dL4 can still be used (programs saved by dL4 2.3.1 and
earlier will not, however, be placed in the local cache). Programs
created by this release of dL4 cannot be used by earlier releases
of dL4.
o CALL-by-filename ('CALL "filename"'), CHAIN, and SWAP will reuse any
library or program files that are shared with the parent program.
For example, if a parent program uses "oldcalls.lib" and CALLs a
subprogram that also uses "oldcalls.lib", then a single copy of
"oldcalls.lib" will be shared between the parent program and the
subprogram. Library and program files will NOT be shared unless the
files have been SAVEd (or LOADSAVEd) in the new program file format.
o An OSN (OEM Security Number) based form of program protection has
been added to dL4. This protection mechanism is very similar to the
PSAVE method in UniBasic. A program saved with the PSAVE command
can be loaded only on systems that have been authorized with a
developer supplied OSN. Any attempt to run protected programs on an
unauthorized system will cause as error 265, "Not licensed to load
or create this program". PSAVE protected programs can be modified
and re-SAVED on any authorized system, but they can be listed only
on systems which have been authorized with a master OSN. The
ProgramDump intrinsic can be used in protected programs and any
errors that occur while attempting to list a source line will be
ignored (variables names can always be listed) The dl4 PSAVE
mechanism differs from that of UniBasic in two ways:
1. There is no "-o" startup option to add new OSNs. Instead,
use the standard REGEDIT or REGEDT32 utilities to add OSN
string values to this registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\Passport\OSN
If this key does not exist, it must be created. Each OSN
value is a string (REG_SZ) value in which the value name is
the company/product name and the value is the OSN key.
2. There is no "-t" startup option to add a temporary OSN. A
temporary OSN is instead added by using the SCOPE "OEM TEMP"
command which will prompt for an OSN that will be used only
by the current SCOPE session.
OSNs are created with the makeosn utility that is supplied as part
of Passport version 2.1. This version of Passport is included in
the dL4 installation program. A PDN (Product Description Number)
is required to use makeosn. OSNs may also be created using the
Unix version of makeosn. Please contact the Dynamic Concepts Sales
department for information on how to obtain a PDN.
To support this protection method, two new commands have been added
to SCOPE: OEM and PSAVE. The OEM command lists the currently
authorized OSNs. If the TEMP option is used ("OEM TEMP"), the OEM
command will first prompt for a temporary OSN to be used only by the
current SCOPE session. The OEM command can be used in the SCOPE
command, BASIC, and debug modes. The PSAVE command is used to
create OSN protected programs. The PSAVE command is identical to
the SAVE command except for an optional OSN number that can precede
the SAVE filename. For example, the command "PSAVE 2,menu" would
save the current program as "menu" after protecting it to require
the second OSN listed by the OEM command. Protected programs can be
created only if the specified OSN is a master OSN. The PSAVE
command is available in the SCOPE command and BASIC modes.
A new option, "-l n", has been added to the SCOPE SAVE command and
to the LOADSAVE utility to create OSN protected programs. The
value "n" is the number of a master OSN as listed by the SCOPE OSN
command.
o This release includes two new executables: runc.exe and scopec.exe.
These are console versions of scopew and runw for use in CGI
programs and other special uses. The console versions differ
from scopew and runw in that all "screen" I/O is performed via
standard input and output, by supporting redirection of standard
input and output, in the use of a console interface instead of an
independent window, and in the names of the frontend programs (scopec
and runc instead of scopew and runw). As in dL4 for Unix, the
environment variables TERM and TERMDIR should be set to select the
filename and directory of a dL4 terminal definition file. The TERM
and TERMDIR values may also be specified in the registry under
either of the following keys:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
Sample terminal definition files can be found in the installation
directory in the subdirectory TERM. While scopec and runc can be
used directly from a DOS command prompt, very little screen control
is possible because the Win32 console provides only minimal
interpretation of control characters.
o To add custom CALLs or drivers to scopec or runc, use the standard
dL4 for Windows development kit. The console and GUI versions of
dL4 differ only in the front end programs and in their use of dL4
drivers. Both versions share the same runtime libraries (dl4rt.dll
and dl4basic.dll).
o The new runtime parameter LUMAP adds a mechanism to map relative
file paths. The LUMAP value consists of one or more space separated
value pairs. Each pair consists of a logical directory name, an
equals sign ("=") character, and an absolute path. Whenever a
relative filename is used, the LUMAP will be searched for a logical
directory name that matches one or more leading directories names of
the relative filename. Leading zeroes in an all numeric directory
name are ignored. If a match is found, the matched portion of the
relative filename will be replaced with the absolute path from
LUMAP. For example, given an LUMAP value of:
"5=M:\usr\accounting Mail=D:\Mail"
the following filenames would be translated as shown:
5/filename -> M:\usr\accounting\filename
005/filename -> M:\usr\accounting\filename
Mail/filename -> D:\Mail\filename
x/5/filename -> x/5/filename ("x" isn't in LUMAP)
Functions such as CHF$(800+c) reverse this mapping to return the
logical filename. Using the LUMAP shown above, if "5/abc" was
opened on channel 2, the actual file opened would be
"M:\usr\accounting\abc", but CHF$(802) would return "5/abc". If
more than one logical directory is mapped to the same actual
directory ("5=T:\acct 6=T:\acct"), then the reverse mapping will
map all occurrences of the actual directory to just one of the
logical directories. CHF$(800+c) and similar functions perform
reverse mapping on all filenames even if the original filename
used an actual rather than a logical directory name.
Filename mapping is applied to both data and program filenames.
Mapping is applied to program filenames before the LIBSTRING
directory list is searched. If a program filename contains a
mapped logical directory, the filename will be converted to an
absolute path and LIBSTRING will not be used.
While the intended use of LUMAP is to support logical unit numbers
and logical directory names, it is also possible to map multiple
leading directories ("Mail/Fred=N:\Mail\Barney") or entire
filenames. The only recommended use of such substitutions is to
translate Windows reserved names such as LPT1 to usable,
non-reserved filenames. For example, the map
"LPT1=D:\dL4\Printers\Printer1.bat"
would make it possible to use "$LPT1" as a printer name even though
"LPT1" is a reserved filename under Windows. Translation of data
or program filenames is not recommended, but it is legal and
supported.
o The ROPEN statement has been redefined to open files with locking
disabled in addition to the previous read-only access. ROPEN is
thus equivalent to 'OPEN "filename"'. This new feature permits
an application to read records that are currently locked by other
processes. This form of open is supported by the Portable
Formatted, Portable Indexed Contiguous, and FoxPro Full-ISAM
drivers. Note: reading records that are currently locked may
return partially updated or inconsistent data.
o The Portable Formatted and Portable Indexed Contiguous drivers have
been modified to support reading through locked records on both
Unix and Windows. The required changes to the locking protocol are
incompatible with previous versions of dL4. Older versions of dL4
should not be used to access files at the same time as this or
later releases of dL4.
o The Portable Formatted, Portable Contiguous, and Portable Indexed
Contiguous drivers now support exclusive opens via the "E" access
mode ('OPEN #c,"file"') or the EOPEN statement. An exclusive
open will succeed only if the file isn't currently open by another
dL4 3.1 user. An error 76 will be returned if another user has
the file open in either shared or exclusive mode. Once opened in
exclusive mode, a file cannot be opened by other dL4 users.
o The default value of ISAMFILES has been increased from 40 to 50.
o A DCC_SYNC command has been implemented in the Portable Index
Contiguous driver to flush the record buffer without releasing the
current record lock. A DCC_SYNC command can be issued by a user
program via the CHANNEL statement ("Channel 20,#c;").
o A new option, "NUMMAP", has been added to the Portable Contiguous
and Portable Indexed Contiguous file drivers to support converting
from UniBasic to Portable Contiguous files. The "NUMMAP" option
has two possible values: "IEEE" (the default) and "IRIS" (to use
IRIS BCD number formats). This option can be used as shown below
with the "CHARSET" option to create a Portable Contiguous file that
uses the IRIS BCD number formats and the IRIS character set:
BUILD #c,"(nummap=Iris,charset=Iris)[n:l]filename"
If a file is built this way, records can be copied directly from a
UniBasic contiguous file by reading and then writing the entire
record using a binary variable. The UniBasic file must contain
only IRIS character and IRIS BCD numeric data. This conversion
does NOT support copying packed fields because they contain
inherently untranslatable binary data.
o The pipe driver has been extended to support printing directly to
a device without running a separate "pfilter" process. This
feature makes it easier to debug printer scripts because most
configuration errors are reported immediately to the OPEN statement.
To use direct printing, the printer script must specify an "output"
option to select the output device and a "translate" option to
select a printer definition file path. For example, the following
script outputs to the device LPT1 after translating output using
the printer definition file "c:\dl4\printers\hplj":
rem dL4opts=output=LPT1,translate=c:\dl4\printers\hplj,lock=true
A printer script using direct output should consist of a single
options line; all subsequent lines will be ignored. A direct
output script always uses the Unicode character set and ignores
any "charset" options.
o The MSC$() function has been extended to provide a MSC$(7) value
which is the hot-key character, if any, that invoked execution of
the current SWAP level. The value of MSC$(7) is an empty string
("") if the current program isn't in a hot-key initiated SWAP level.
This new value can be used to perform different functions in a
hot-key SWAP program based on which hot-key character was entered.
o The 'IOBI' and 'IOEI' binary input mnemonics can now be used in dL4
windows. The meaning of binary input is dependent on the operating
system environment and so the use of 'IOBI' should be avoided in
portable programs ('IOBC' and activate-on-control-character mode may
be a suitable replacement). In all environments, binary input
disables special treatment of editing keys such as backspace. In the
Windows environment, binary input disables special character handling
by dL4 and treats all characters as data. Special characters like
Control-Alt-Del, which are handled by Windows itself, are not
effected. Echo should be disabled when using binary input to avoid
echoing illegal characters.
o The BASIC/Debug command SIZE has been extended to accept a "-l"
option which causes the sizes and names of all linked libraries to
be displayed.
o Two new commands, "WB" and "WT", have been added to the SCOPE
debugger to move the debugger window to the bottom ("WB") or the top
("WT") of the screen. Note that a debugger window is only used if
dL4 windows are open.
o Three new commands, "WF", "WH", and "WS", have been added to the
SCOPE debugger to resize the height of the debugger window. The
commands set the debugger window to the full ("WF") height, one half
("WH") height, or a quarter ("WS") height of the full screen, The
debugger WINDOW command has been extended to accept a single numeric
parameter to set the number of lines in the window (the command
"WINDOW 6" or "W6" would select a height of 6 lines).
o The SCOPE DISPLAY command and the ProgramDump intrinsic CALL have
been modified to print repeated array values in a single line using
an array slice notation. For example, if the array V had 10
elements and all of the elements were zero except for V[4]=7 and
V[8]=9, then the command "DISPLAY V" would produce the following
output:
* V[0;3],%13 = 0
V[4],%13 = 7
* V[5;7],%13 = 0
V[8],%13 = 9
V[9],%13 = 0
Note that all lines with repeated data are prefixed with an
asterisk.
o The size and position of the debugger window is retained between
debugging sessions until SCOPE exits.
o The EXIT command has been added to the debugger so that the user
can exit directly to SCOPE command mode.
o The SCOPE DRIVERS command now accepts a search string to select
which drivers are displayed. Example: "drivers isam".
o The maximum port number has been increased from 255 to 4095.
o A new optional section, "[Header]", is supported by the conversion
profile files used by the CONVERT command and the LOADSAVE "-c"
option. This section can be used as shown below to add standard
OPTION statements to programs as they are converted:
[Header]
Line=OPTION STRING SUBSCRIPTS IRIS
Line=OPTION BASE YEAR 1988
Lines from the header section are added using the first unused line
number and so they may be inserted after the first converted line.
o A new standard intrinsic CALL, DupChannel, has been added to dL4.
This call allows dL4 programs to duplicate existing open channels
onto closed user channel numbers. These duplicate channels can be
used to perform I/O in the same way as the original channels. The
primary use of DupChannel is to duplicate the standard input and
output channels that are used by INPUT and PRINT when a channel
isn't specified. By duplicating the standard input or output
channel onto a user channel number, a program can apply channel
oriented statements such as SET to a standard channel. Because
DupChannel duplicates the base standard input and output channels,
it can also be used to avoid window tracking when Dynamic Windows
are active. Closing the duplicate or original channel has no
effect other than freeing the channel number unless all copies of
the original channel are closed.
BASIC syntax:
Call DupChannel(newchannel, oldchannel)
Where:
newchannel - a numeric variable or expression specifying
the closed user channel (0 - 99) onto which
the standard channel will be duplicated. An
error will be generated if newchannel specifies
a channel that is already open.
oldchannel - a numeric variable or expression with a value
of an open user channel (0 - 99), standard input
channel (-1) or standard output channel (-2) to
duplicate. The standard input and output
channels are the original base channels and not
the window channels used by Dynamic Windows.
An error will be generated if oldchannel
specifies a channel that is not open.
o A new standard intrinsic function, CRC32, has been added to dL4.
CRC32() returns a 32-bit CRC checksum code of the first argument
which must be either a binary or string variable. An optional
second numeric argument can be used to pass the CRC value from a
previous call and calculate a combined CRC of several variables.
CRCs are calculated against the DIMed size of strings so that zero
characters can be included in the CRC. Subscripts can be used to
limit the number of characters included in the CRC. So that string
values will produce the same CRC values on all platforms, each
UNICODE character of a string is forced into a most-significant-byte
-first ordering for CRC calculation. An error will be generated if
an illegal number of parameters, parameter type, or parameter value
is used.
BASIC syntax:
x = CRC32(var)
x = CRC32(var, oldcrc)
o A new standard intrinsic function, FindChannel, has been added.
FindChannel() returns the first closed channel number in a range.
If no range is specified, the first channel between 99 and 0 (note
descending order) is returned. An error will be generated if an
illegal number of parameters, parameter type, or parameter value
is used.
BASIC syntax:
x = FindChannel()
x = FindChannel(startchan,endchan)
o The Env and SortInString (CALL 65) intrinsic CALLs are now standard
intrinsic CALLs. In previous releases, the sources for these CALLs
were included in the development kit, but they were not linked into
SCOPE or RUN. The effect of using Env to change the value of dL4
runtime parameters is undefined for the running process: the change
may or may not effect the value used by the running process.
Applications must not depend on the current treatment of environment
variables by dL4 because that behavior may change in future releases.
Applications should only change environment variables defined by
the application itself.
o A new mode has been added to the PORT statement. PORT mode 4
returns the name of the current program of a specified port. For
example, the statement:
PORT P,4,S,F$
will return in F$ the name of the program running on port P. As
with PORT mode 3, a status is returned in S indicating success (zero)
or failure (one, port not attached).
o The SCOPE command line now uses LIBSTRING to find BASIC program files.
o The SPAWN statement now uses LIBSTRING to find BASIC program files
unless an OPTION statement with "CHAIN ALTERNATE DIRECTORIES OFF" is
used. An error 206 ("subprogram file not found") will be returned
if the specified program cannot be located.
o The EXAMINE, BREAK, and NOBREAK debugger commands now recognize the
filename of the main program in addition to its path (as displayed
by the STATUS command).
o The FoxPro Full-ISAM driver now supports the memo (.fpt) portion of
a FoxPro file when deleting, MODIFYing, or DUPLICATEing FoxPro
Full-ISAM files.
o The FoxPro Full-ISAM driver now tries both the normalized and
literal names when mapping fields and indices. This allows the MAP
statement to support a wider range of field or index names.
o Input timeout ("INPUT TIM") is now supported on phantom ports.
o Input characters following a "hot key" (SWAP input action) character
are now always left in the input queue and can be read by the
SWAPped to program.
o When native locale date format is enabled by the statement
"OPTION DATE FORMAT NATIVE", string to date conversion now uses
the short date style of the regional locale information to select
the preferred ordering of numeric dates. For example, if the short
date format is "yy/MM/dd", the statement 'D# = "01/02/03"' would
store the date "February 3, 2001" in D#. Please note that string
to date conversion tries several formats, both numeric and
non-numeric, to parse the date and time.
o Input handling by the RAW driver for serial communication devices
such as COM1 has been improved to support input timeout. Note that
serial device characteristics such as speed and flow control must
be setup externally using the Windows 95/NT MODE command.
o The maximum parameter value for the PRINT TAB function and the
COMMA SPACING option has been increased from 255 to 65535.
o The following new TIM functions have been added to return 4-digit
years:
TIM(14) Current date in the from MMDDYYYY, MM = 1-12,
DD = 1-31
TIM(15) Current date in the form YYYYDDD, DDD = 1 to 366
TIM(16) Current year in the form YYYY
These functions correspond to the two digit year functions TIM(4),
TIM(5), and TIM(8).
o A new channel function, CHF#(), has been added to return the
creation, last access, or last modification date/time of a file.
The creation date/time is returned by CHF#(100+c) where 'c' is a
channel number. Similarly, the last access and modification
date/times are returned by CHF$(200+c) and CHF#(300+c). Note that
opening a file will change the last access date/time unless the
"Raw" file driver is used.
o Linker speed has been improved for programs that use an extremely
large number of libraries (> 50).
o Behavior change: The first record number of a Portable Indexed
Contiguous file can now be set to zero using a mode 1, index 0
SEARCH statement with a status value of 6. The statement must
be executed prior to freezing the index definitions. In previous
versions of dL4, an attempt to set a first record number of zero
was ignored.
o Behavior change: the linker has been modified to allow user defined
procedures to overload intrinsic procedures. For example, a user
program that defines a function called FindChannel will use that
function rather than the new intrinsic FindChannel function.
o Behavior change: Portable Indexed Contiguous and UniBasic Indexed
Contiguous files now flush the data record buffer whenever a key is
inserted or deleted. This avoids a situation in which, when a new
record was inserted, a separate program reading the file and
ignoring record locks would receive a "Record not found" error when
accessing the new record. Note that a "Record not found" error can
still occur if the new record is not written until after the key is
inserted. Writing the new record after inserting the key is an
application error which must be corrected in the application program
(otherwise there is an unavoidable period between the SEARCH and the
WRITE in which the key exists, but the data record does not).
o Behavior change: the file autoselection mechanism now recognizes
UniBasic formatted, contiguous, and indexed-contiguous files. The
drivers for these files are not included in dL4 for Windows because
these files are not portable and, hence, no existing Unix UniBasic
file could be accessed. New files should be created in the Portable
Formatted, Contiguous, and Indexed-Contiguous formats. A "No such
driver" error will be reported by any attempt to open a UniBasic
file.
o File locking in Indexed Contiguous files has been modified to
increase compatibility with NFS client software.
o The runtime parameter, "WarnOnClose", has been extended to support
multiline messages by treating "\n" as a line separator. A
backslash must now be entered as "\\".
o The appearance of full screen scrolling has been improved for many
display cards.
o Behavior change: if a network connection on standard input or
standard output is lost by scopec.exe or runc.exe, it will be
assumed that a telnet-style connection has been terminated and
that dL4 should exit.
o Behavior change: an attempt to delete an open file will wait for up
to one minute for the file to close rather than immediately
reporting a "File is busy" error.
o Bug fixed: an "Internal error in driver" error was reported when
searching a FoxPro Full-ISAM file that had been opened in read/write
mode if the file permissions allowed only read-only access.
o Bug fixed: a FoxPro Full-ISAM key size of more than 127 characters
caused the index to become corrupted. Please note that while keys
of up to 240 characters are supported, key sizes should be limited
to 150 characters or less for efficient index operation.
o Bug fixed: selecting a cut-and-paste area on the screen caused the
display to become corrupted if the screen was scrolled.
o Bug fixed: To increase compatibility with BITS programs, the Portable
Contiguous and Portable Indexed Contiguous drivers have been changed
to follow BITS alignment rules when OPTION FILE ACCESS RAW is used.
Using FILE ACCESS RAW, the current file position will no longer be
rounded up to an even byte boundary when reading or writing numeric
variables or when executing MAT READ or MAT WRITE statements. The
new behavior matches that of the UniBasic Contiguous and Indexed
Contiguous drivers. If desired, the Portable Contiguous driver
(pcontig.c) in the dL4 development kit can be modified to restore
pre-3.1 behavior.
o Bug fixed: an address violation or memory corruption could occur if
an 'EG' (End Graphics) mnemonic was the first character in an output
string when using either the UniBasic or IRIS character set. This
would most commonly occur when printing to an output pipe using the
default character set.
o Bug fixed: SCOPE or RUN would "hang" (enter an infinite loop) when
attempting to run or link a program that contained a duplicate
procedure definition in a library.
o Bug fixed: the cursor is moved to the end of input line when an
enter key is pressed during input editing.
o Bug fixed: SPC(23) returned -1 instead of "n" after the statement
"LIB n" had been executed.
o Bug fixed: the FoxPro Full-ISAM driver did not correctly concatenate
field names for members of sub-structures. When a member of a
record structure was itself a structure, all members of that
sub-structure were treated as having the same, incorrect name.
o Bug fixed: trailing exclamation marks were not recognized by the
DUPLICATE or MODIFY statements for Portable Indexed Contiguous files.
o Bug fixed: the SYSTEM statement generated a runtime syntax error
if a status variable was used with an external system command
('SYSTEM "cmd",S').
o Bug fixed: converting a string to a date caused an error 15 if the
date was numeric and a two digit year of zero was used. For
example, the statement 'D# = "14-10-00"' would fail and report an
error.
o Bug fixed: expressions containing 24 string concatenation operations
could cause memory violations or corrupt the current program.
o Bug fixed: reading the command line ("INPUT (0,X)C$") after using
the debugger could cause memory violations.
o Bug fixed: input was echoed incorrectly in insert mode.
o Bug fixed: including a space in BREAK/NOBREAK search string (such
as in "BREAK /CALL PGM/") resulted in a format error.
o Bug fixed: if a newly built and structured Portable Indexed
Contiguous file was CLEARed (rather than CLOSEd), the index portion
of the file wasn't deleted.
o Bug fixed: pfilter sometimes delayed output until subsequent output
or a CLOSE occurred.
o Bug fixed: rounding of ICE format numbers has been improved so that
values such as "4.49999999" will be loaded correctly.
o Bug fixed: a "Record not written" error was generated whenever a
program was executed with LIBSTRING defined in HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
of the registry.
o Bug fixed: an "Internal driver error" occurred in the Microsoft SQL
Server Full-ISAM driver when searching a non-unique index that
shared key fields with the primary unique index.
o Beta version bug fixed: when using LUMAP with numeric directories
(Logical Unit numbers), all leading zeroes were deleted except for
the last zero. Thus, "005/file" and "05/file" were treated as having
a directory name of "05" rather than "5".
o Bug fixed: if LUMAP was defined and the current directory was one of
the directories in LUMAP, then a CALL, CHAIN, or SWAP to a program
in the current directory would fail if the program filename did not
specify a directory ('CALL "PGM"' rather than 'CALL "1/PGM"'). In
addition, a SCOPE "CD lu/" resulted in an "illegal filename" error.
o Beta version bug fixed: an attempt to load a program or library saved
by an older version (2.3.1 or earlier) of dL4 would result instead in
loading a different, but previously loaded, program.
o Beta version bug fixed: if two identical programs were loaded
consecutively, they were treated as having the same path.
Networking
==========
o File access under dL4 has been tested with Windows NT file servers
using both TCP/IP and NetBEUI protocols. dL4 file access does not
use any special network system calls and should be compatible with
any network file service that supports file access through normal
file access system calls. File access to Novell servers or using
third-party NFS client software has not been tested.
o Windows 95/98/ME systems with out-of-date system files or incorrect
configuration can improperly cache file data from network file
servers. This caching problem can corrupt data files and their
indexes. The dL4 checksys.exe utility in the dL4 installation
directory should be run on all Windows 95/98/ME systems that share
data files over a network. The utility will detect any needed
local system updates and will offer to set necessary system
registry options. The utility should also be copied to and run
on all Windows NT/2000 file servers accessed by Windows client
systems.
This caching problem has been detected only when using Windows
95/98/ME client systems. The problem has not been observed when
using Windows NT/2000 file servers with Windows NT/2000 client
systems (service pack 3 or later applied to all NT systems).
Notes
=====
o dL4 for Windows will run under the Windows 98, Windows ME, Windows NT,
Windows 2000, Windows XP, Windows 2003, Windows 2008, or Windows Vista
operating systems.
o Before using dL4, Passport for Windows must be installed and a valid
license and SSN must be registered using the ssnmaint utility. The
ssnmaint utility is part of Passport and can found in the Passport
program group. Please contact the sales department at Dynamic Concepts
(sales@dynamic.com) for information on obtaining a license and SSN.
o The record locking protocols used by the Portable Formatted and
Portable Indexed Contiguous drivers are incompatible with pre-3.1
versions of dL4. The protocol was changed to support reading through
locked records on both Unix and Windows. If a Portable Formatted,
Contiguous, or Indexed Contiguous file is accessed simultaneously by
this release and a pre-3.1 release, the file data may be corrupted.
o The "OPTION FILE ACCESS RAW" statement is used to select BITS
compatible file treatment and data alignment rules. In pre-3.1
versions of dL4, the Portable Contiguous, Portable Indexed
Contiguous, and Full-ISAM Bridge drivers did not properly follow
BITS alignment rules when OPTION FILE ACCESS RAW was used. In dL4
3.1, these errors have been corrected. If your programs use the
FILE ACCESS RAW option, your programs and file layouts should be
examined for compatibility with these changes. Using FILE ACCESS
RAW, the current file position will no longer be rounded up to an
even byte boundary when reading or writing numeric variables or
when executing MAT READ or MAT WRITE statements. If desired, the
driver sources in the dL4 development kit can be modified to
restore pre-3.1 behavior.
o Copy and Paste functions are available via the "Edit" menu
which is part of the main window menu bar or part of the
System menu ("Alt-Space").
o Font characteristics, window size, keyboard translation, and
input action assignments can be modified using the
"Preferences" menu. The "Preferences" menu is part of the
main window menu bar or part of the System menu ("Alt-Space").
The "Preferences" menu provides access to the "Font", "Window" and
"Keyboard" dialogs. Features that are controlled by the "Window"
or "Font" dialogs will not change until the next entry into scopew
or runw.
o The number of lines and columns in the main window is
controlled by registry settings and defaults to 25 lines of
80 columns. The values cannot be changed for a running instance
of dL4, but the registry values can be modified by the "Window"
dialog for use by the next entry into dL4. In that dialog, the
canvas values control the actual number of rows and columns while
the window values control the number of rows and columns that are
displayed.
o The default foreground and background colors are controlled by
registry settings and default to those of the system color
scheme. The default values cannot be changed for a running
instance of dL4, but the registry values can be modified for
future invocations by using the "Window" dialog.
o Keyboard translations and input action assignments can be
modified using the "Keyboard" dialog of the "Preferences"
menu. Changes are applied immediately and are saved in the
registry for all future invocations of dL4. The "Keyboard"
dialog contains two sections: "Special Key to Unicode" and
"Unicode to Input Action".
The "Special Key to Unicode" section is used to examine, add,
or modify translations of key combinations to Unicode
characters. For example, to define "Shift-F1" to be the
character 'F13', enter "F14D", the Unicode character value of
'F13', in the edit box under the heading "Unicode", select
the edit box under the heading "Key Combination", press the
SHIFT and F1 keys, and then click "Set" and "Ok". Warning:
it is possible intercept normal Windows keys such as Alt-F4
(Close Window/Application) and thus interfere with normal
Windows keyboard usage. In the list box, a "Key Combination"
value of "VK=xxx" indicates a key combination which isn't
supported by the keyboard.
The "Unicode to Input Action" section is used to examine, add,
or modify assignments of input actions to Unicode characters.
For example, the character 'F9' is assigned by default to be
the SWAP character. To use 'F9' as a data character, select
the character range U+F149 to U+F149 in the list box, select
"Data" from the "Action" drop down list, and the click "Set"
and "Ok".
o The default input action assignments are:
control-B Send signal to program
control-C Interrupt program
control-D Abort program
control-E Toggle echo and enter control-E
into input
Backspace Backspace and delete character
Enter Enter
control-X Delete all input
Escape Escape program
Left-arrow Move cursor left
Right-arrow Move cursor right
Insert Toggle input insert/replace mode
Delete Delete input character
Home Move cursor to start of input
End Move cursor to end of input
Control-Left-arrow Move cursor to previous word
Control-Right-arrow Move cursor to next word
Control-End Delete characters to end of input
F9 Swap (if enabled via SWAPF())
BEGIN Enter "BEGIN" mode
o The port number used by dL4 can be controlled by setting the
PORT environment variable or the registry REG_DWORD value PORT
under one of the following keys:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
o The values for SPC(5), SPC(7), and MSC(7) can be controlled
by creating SPC5, SPC7, and/or MSC7 environment variables or
registry values. Registry values must be of the type
REG_DWORD and must be created under one of these keys:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
o The LIBSTRING value can be set by creating a LIBSTRING
environment variable or registry value. A Registry value must
be created under one of the following keys:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4\Environment
o The registry can be edited using the standard REGEDIT or REGEDT32
(for Windows NT/2000) utilities.
o Screen, keyboard, and other configuration information can be
copied between systems by exporting the registry contents of
Software\DynamicConcepts\dL4 to a file and then importing that
file on the target system. Under Windows 95/98 or Windows NT/2000,
the standard REGEDIT utility can be used to perform this
function.
Platforms
=========
Operating system information for dL4 9.2 production:
ID Platform OS
--------------------------------------------------------------------
1B Win32 Intel Windows 98/ME/NT/2000/XP/2003/2008/Vista