] Conversion Documentation
> Which piece of documentation covers things like
>
> VARIABLEONE = VARIABLE"L(#33)"
>
> and
>
> VARIABLETWO = VARIABLE"R(%9)"
>
> ... I'd like to know what exactly it is that I'm
> doing when I use them rat
> Which piece of documentation covers things like
>
> VARIABLEONE = VARIABLE"L(#33)"
>
> and
>
> VARIABLETWO = VARIABLE"R(%9)"
>
> ... I'd like to know what exactly it is that I'm
> doing when I use them rather than just blindly
> following examples that I've seen to produce results I want.
Th
org] On Behalf Of jjuser ud2
> Sent: Wednesday, June 15, 2011 12:49 PM
> To: U2 Users List
> Subject: [U2] Conversion Documentation
>
> Good afternoon,
>
> Which piece of documentation covers things like
>
> VARIABLEONE = VARIABLE"L(#33)"
>
> and
>
> VARI
FORMAT()
David A. Green
(480) 813-1725
DAG Consulting
-Original Message-
From: u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org
[mailto:u2-users-boun...@listserver.u2ug.org] On Behalf Of jjuser ud2
Sent: Wednesday, June 15, 2011 12:49 PM
To: U2 Users List
Subject: [U2] Conversion Documentation
check out FMT, the format you are displaying is more pure Pick
FMT has it's roots in Prime information
Rich
jjuser ud2 wrote:
Good afternoon,
Which piece of documentation covers things like
VARIABLEONE = VARIABLE"L(#33)"
and
VARIABLETWO = VARIABLE"R(%9)"
please? I can find OCONV document
Good afternoon,
Which piece of documentation covers things like
VARIABLEONE = VARIABLE"L(#33)"
and
VARIABLETWO = VARIABLE"R(%9)"
please? I can find OCONV documentation left and right, but I can't
seem to find a reference that says what the equivalent of these
statements is. I've used them in