Difference between revisions of "Contatenate Strings"
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− | In order to '''[[Contatenate Strings]]''' it is necessary to use the command <code>CONCAT</code>.<br/> | + | In order to '''[[Contatenate Strings]]''' it is necessary to use the command <code>CONCAT()</code>.<br/> |
<code><span style="color: green; text-decoration: none;">$$ Example of concat Command</span><br/></code> | <code><span style="color: green; text-decoration: none;">$$ Example of concat Command</span><br/></code> | ||
− | <code>DECL/char,256,FILENAME,PART1,NAME<br/></code> | + | ::<code>DECL/char,256,FILENAME,PART1,NAME<br/></code> |
− | <code>PART1=ASSIGN/'MY_PART'<br/></code> | + | ::<code>PART1=ASSIGN/'MY_PART'<br/></code> |
− | <code>NAME=ASSIGN/'MY_NAME'<br/></code> | + | ::<code>NAME=ASSIGN/'MY_NAME'<br/></code> |
− | <code>FILENAME=ASSIGN/CONCAT(PART1,NAME,'.TXT')<br/></code> | + | ::<code>FILENAME=ASSIGN/CONCAT(PART1,NAME,'.TXT')<br/></code> |
Revision as of 11:59, 3 August 2016
In order to Contatenate Strings it is necessary to use the command CONCAT()
.
$$ Example of concat Command
DECL/char,256,FILENAME,PART1,NAME
PART1=ASSIGN/'MY_PART'
NAME=ASSIGN/'MY_NAME'
FILENAME=ASSIGN/CONCAT(PART1,NAME,'.TXT')