Hello Alan,
Sorry to be unclear in my posting.
I am using the German/Austrian codepage on my PersCom (273 or 1141 with t
he
Euro symbol). That means the EBCDIC codes coming from z/VM are presented
on
my Workstation according to the codepage 273. Some of the characters used
by
z/VM like some
Florian,
I have never managed to edit C programs using any thing other than the US
code page 1047, so if any one else has an answer to this I would also like
to know the answer...
Dave Wade G4UGM
Illegitimi Non Carborundum
-Original Message-
From: The IBM z/VM Operating System
On Sat, Jan 3, 2009 at 6:11 PM, Mike Walter mike.wal...@hewitt.com wrote:
5) Attach the new MDISK to your server (or, if you did it right, the server
*should* find it the next time it is logged on due to the MDISK statement in
its directory entry).
You meant to say make the guest link the
Terry,
How'd it go? Did you get the new SPOOL volume detached from SYSTEM,
re-labeled with CPFMTXA, attached to SYSTEM and placed in use (with
appropriate updates to SYSTEM CONFIG, after which you ran CPSYNTAX,
right?)?
Mike Walter
Hewitt Associates
Any opinions expressed herein are mine
Indeed, Sir Rob, you are correct. I should have been MUCH more precise.
I usually include an error in my instructions as a learning exercise for
the new reader. That's my story, and I'm sticking to it! ;-)
Happy New Year, all!
Mike Walter
Hewitt Associates
Any opinions expressed herein
What is often done t fix the C language problems is using
SET INPUT x yy
SET OUTPUT yy x
where x is the character found on your keyboard, and yy the hex code
expected by the C compiler.
2009/1/3 Dave Wade g4...@dpwade.eclipse.co.uk:
Florian,
I have never managed to edit C programs using
On Saturday, 01/03/2009 at 05:47 EST, Florian Bilek
florian.bi...@gmail.com wrote:
I am using the German/Austrian codepage on my PersCom (273 or 1141 with
the
Euro symbol). That means the EBCDIC codes coming from z/VM are presented
on
my Workstation according to the codepage 273. Some of