Processing of Date Information

This document covers various aspects concerning the handling of date information in Natural applications.

The following topics are covered:


Edit Masks for Date Fields and Date System Variables

If you wish the value of a date field to be output in a specific representation, you usually specify an edit mask for the field. With an edit mask, you determine character by character what the output is to look like.

If you wish to use the current date in a specific representation, you need not define a date field and specify an edit mask for it; instead you can simply use a date system variable. Natural provides various date system variables, which contain the current date in different representations. Some of these representations contain a 2-digit year, some a 4-digit year.

For more information and a list of all date system variables, see the System Variables documentation.

Default Edit Mask for Date - DTFORM Parameter

The profile parameter DTFORM determines the default format used for dates as part of the default title on Natural reports, for date constants and for date input.

This date format determines the sequence of the day, month and year components of a date, as well as the delimiter characters to be used between these components.

Possible DTFORM settings are:

Setting Date Format1 Example2
DTFORM=I yyyy-mm-dd 2014-01-31
DTFORM=G dd.mm.yyyy 31.01.2014
DTFORM=E dd/mm/yyyy 31/01/2014
DTFORM=U mm/dd/yyyy 01/31/2014

1 dd = day, mm = month, yyyy = year
2 assumed that DF or DFTITLE is set to L

The DTFORM parameter can be set in the Natural parameter module/file or dynamically when Natural is invoked. By default, DTFORM=I applies.

Date Format for Alphanumeric Representation - DF Parameter

If an edit mask is specified, the representation of the field value is determined by the edit mask. If no edit mask is specified, the representation of the field value is determined by the session parameter DF in combination with the profile parameter DTFORM.

With the DF parameter, you can choose one of the following date representations:

DF=S 8-byte representation with a 2-digit year and delimiters. Example: yy-mm-dd.
DF=I 8-byte representation with a 4-digit year without delimiters. Example: yyyymmdd.
DF=L 10-byte representation with a 4-digit year and delimiters. Example: yyyy-mm-dd.

For each representation, the sequence of the day, month and year components, and the delimiter characters used are determined by the DTFORM parameter.

By default, DF=S applies (except for INPUT statements; see below).

The session parameter DF is evaluated at compilation.

It can be specified with the following statements:

When specified in one of these statements, the DF parameter applies to the following:

Statement Effect of DF parameter
DISPLAY, WRITE, PRINT When the value of a date variable is output with one of these statements, the value is converted to an alphanumeric representation before it is output. The DF parameter determines which representation is used.
MOVE, COMPRESS When the value of a date variable is transferred to an alphanumeric field with a MOVE or COMPRESS statement, the value is converted to an alphanumeric representation before it is transferred. The DF parameter determines which representation is used.
STACK, RUN, FETCH When the value of a date variable is placed on the stack, it is converted to alphanumeric representation before it is placed on the stack. The DF parameter determines which representation is used.

The same applies when a date variable is specified as a parameter in a FETCH or RUN statement (as these parameters are also passed via the stack).

INPUT When a data variable is used in an INPUT statement, the DF parameter determines how a value must be entered in the field.

However, when a date variable for which no DF parameter is specified is used in an INPUT statement, the date can be entered either with a 2-digit year and delimiters or with a 4-digit year and no delimiters. In this case, too, the sequence of the day, month and year, and the delimiter characters to be used, are determined by the DTFORM parameter.

Note:
With DF=S, only 2 digits are provided for the year information; this means that if a date value contained the century, this information would be lost during the conversion. To retain the century information, you set DF=I or DF=L.

Examples of DF Parameter with WRITE Statements

These examples assume that DTFORM=G applies.

/* DF=S (default) 
WRITE *DATX   /* Output has this format: dd.mm.yy 
END
FORMAT DF=I  
WRITE *DATX   /* Output has this format: ddmmyyyy 
END
FORMAT DF=L 
WRITE *DATX   /* Output has this format: dd.mm.yyyy 
END

Example of DF Parameter with MOVE Statement

This example assumes that DTFORM=E applies.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE  (D) INIT <D'31/01/2014'> 
  1 #ALPHA (A10) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
MOVE #DATE        TO #ALPHA /* Result: #ALPHA contains 31/01/14   
MOVE #DATE (DF=I) TO #ALPHA /* Result: #ALPHA contains 31012014   
MOVE #DATE (DF=L) TO #ALPHA /* Result: #ALPHA contains 31/01/2014 
...

Example of DF Parameter with STACK Statement

This example assumes that DTFORM=I applies.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE  (D) INIT <D'2014-01-31'>
  1 #ALPHA1(A10) 
  1 #ALPHA2(A10) 
  1 #ALPHA3(A10) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
STACK TOP DATA #DATE (DF=S) #DATE (DF=I) #DATE (DF=L) 
... 
INPUT #ALPHA1 #ALPHA2 #ALPHA3 
... 
/* Result: #ALPHA1 contains 14-01-31   
/*         #ALPHA2 contains 20140131   
/*         #ALPHA3 contains 2014-01-31 
...

Example of DF Parameter with INPUT Statement

This example assumes that DTFORM=I applies.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE1 (D) 
  1 #DATE2 (D) 
  1 #DATE3 (D) 
  1 #DATE4 (D) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
INPUT #DATE1 (DF=S) /* Input must have this format: yy-mm-dd 
      #DATE2 (DF=I) /* Input must have this format: yyyymmdd 
      #DATE3 (DF=L) /* Input must have this format: yyyy-mm-dd 
      #DATE4        /* Input must have this format: yy-mm-dd or yyyymmdd 
...

Date Format for Output - DFOUT Parameter

The session/profile parameter DFOUT only applies to date fields in INPUT, DISPLAY, WRITE and PRINT statements for which no edit mask is specified, and for which no DF parameter applies.

For date fields which are displayed by INPUT, DISPLAY, PRINT and WRITE statements and for which neither an edit mask is specified nor a DF parameter applies, the profile/session parameter DFOUT determines the format in which the field values are displayed.

With the DFOUT parameter, you can choose one of the following date representations:

DFOUT=S 8-byte representation with a 2-digit year and delimiters. Example: yy-mm-dd.
DFOUT=I 8-byte representation with a 4-digit year and no delimiters. Example: yyyymmdd.

By default, DFOUT=S applies.

For each representation, the sequence of the day, month and year components and the delimiter characters used (if so) are determined by the DTFORM parameter.

The lengths of the date fields are not affected by the DFOUT setting, as either date value representation fits into an 8-byte field.

The DFOUT parameter can be set in the Natural parameter module/file, dynamically when Natural is invoked, or at session level. It is evaluated at runtime.

Example:

This example assumes that DTFORM=I applies.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
1 #DATE  (D) INIT <D'2014-01-31'> 
END-DEFINE 
... 
WRITE #DATE        /* Output if DFOUT=S is set ...: 14-01-31 
                   /* Output if DFOUT=I is set ...: 20140131 
WRITE #DATE (DF=L) /* Output (regardless of DFOUT): 2014-01-31 
...

Date Format for Stack - DFSTACK Parameter

The session/profile parameter DFSTACK only applies to date fields used in STACK, FETCH and RUN statements for which no DF parameter has been specified.

The DFSTACK parameter determines the format in which the values of date variables are placed on the stack via a STACK, RUN or FETCH statement.

The DFSTACK parameter can be set in the Natural parameter module/file, dynamically when Natural is invoked, or at session level . It is evaluated at runtime.

Possible DFSTACK settings are:

DFSTACK=S 8-byte date variables are placed on the stack with a 2-digit year and delimiters. Example: yy-mm-dd.

DFSTACK=S places a date on the stack without the century information (which is lost). When the value is then read from the stack and placed into another date variable, the century is either assumed to be the current one or determined by the setting of the YSLW parameter (see also Year Sliding Window). This might lead to the century being different from that of the original date value; however, Natural would not issue any error in this case.

DFSTACK=C Same as DFSTACK=S. However:

Natural issues a runtime error if the date value to be stacked would result in a century different from that of the original value, either because of the YSLW parameter or because the original century is not the same as the current century.

DFSTACK=I 8-byte date variables are placed on the stack with a 4-digit year and no delimiters. Example: yyyymmdd.

By default, DFSTACK=S applies.

For each date representation, the sequence of the day, month and year components and the delimiter characters used (if so) are determined by the DTFORM parameter.

Example:

This example assumes that DTFORM=I and YSLW=0 apply.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE  (D) INIT <D'2014-01-31'> 
  1 #ALPHA1(A8) 
  1 #ALPHA2(A10) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
STACK TOP DATA #DATE #DATE (DF=L) 
... 
INPUT #ALPHA1 #ALPHA2 
... 
/* Result if DFSTACK=S or =C is set: #ALPHA1 contains 14-01-31   
/* Result if DFSTACK=I is set .....: #ALPHA1 contains 20140131   
/* Result (regardless of DFSTACK) .: #ALPHA2 contains 2014-01-31 
...

Year Sliding Window - YSLW Parameter

The profile parameter YSLW allows you determine the century of a 2-digit year value.

The YSLW parameter can be set in the Natural parameter module/file or dynamically when Natural is invoked. It is evaluated at runtime when an alphanumeric date value with a 2-digit year is moved into a date variable. This applies to data values which are:

The YSLW parameter determines the range of years covered by a so-called "year sliding window". The sliding-window mechanism assumes a date with a 2-digit year to be within a "window" of 100 years. Within these 100 years, every 2-digit year value can be uniquely related to a specific century.

With the YSLW parameter, you determine how many years in the past that 100-year range is to begin: The YSLW value is subtracted from the current year to determine the first year of the window range.

Possible values of the YSLW parameter are 0 to 99. The default value is YSLW=0, which means that no sliding-window mechanism is used; that is, a date with a 2-digit year is assumed to be in the current century.

Example 1:

If the current year is 2014 and you specify YSLW=40, the sliding window will cover the years 1974 to 2073. A 2-digit year value nn from 74 to 99 is interpreted accordingly as 19nn, while a 2-digit year value nn from 00 to 73 is interpreted as 20nn.

Example 2:

If the current year is 2014 and you specify YSLW=20, the sliding window will cover the years 1994 to 2093. A 2-digit year value nn from 94 to 99 is interpreted accordingly as 19nn, while a 2-digit year value nn from 00 to 93 is interpreted as 20nn.

Combinations of DFSTACK and YSLW

The following examples illustrate the effects of using various combinations of the parameters DFSTACK and YSLW.

Note:
All these examples assume that DTFORM=I applies.

Example 1:

This example assumes the current year to be 2014, and that the parameter settings DFSTACK=S (default) and YSLW=20 apply.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE1 (D) INIT <D'1956-12-31'> 
  1 #DATE2 (D) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
STACK TOP DATA #DATE1 /* century information is lost (year 56 is stacked) 
... 
INPUT #DATE2          /* year sliding window determines 56 to be 2056 
... 
/* Result: #DATE2 contains 2056-12-31

In this case, the year sliding window is not set appropriately, so that the century information is (inadvertently) changed.

Example 2:

This example assumes the current year to be 2014, and that the parameter settings DFSTACK=S (default) and YSLW=60 apply.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE1 (D) INIT <D'1956-12-31'> 
  1 #DATE2 (D) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
STACK TOP DATA #DATE1 /* century information is lost (year 56 is stacked) 
... 
INPUT #DATE2          /* year sliding window determines 56 to be 1956 
... 
/* Result: #DATE2 contains 1956-12-31

In this case, the year sliding window is set appropriately, so that the original century information is correctly restored.

Example 3:

This example assumes the current year to be 2014, and that the parameter settings DFSTACK=C and YSLW=0 (default) apply.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE1 (D) INIT <D'1956-12-31'> 
  1 #DATE2 (D) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
STACK TOP DATA #DATE1 /* century information is lost (year 56 is stacked) 
... 
INPUT #DATE2          /* 56 is assumed to be in current century -> 2056 
... 
/* Result: NAT1130 runtime error (Unintended century switch...)

In this case, the century information is (inadvertently) changed. However, this change is intercepted by the DFSTACK=C setting.

Example 4:

This example assumes the current year to be 2014, and that the parameter settings DFSTACK=C and YSLW=60 apply.

DEFINE DATA LOCAL 
  1 #DATE1 (D) INIT <D'2056-12-31'> 
  1 #DATE2 (D) 
END-DEFINE 
... 
STACK TOP DATA #DATE1 /* century information is lost (year 56 is stacked) 
... 
INPUT #DATE2          /* year sliding window determines 56 to be 1956 
... 
/* Result: NAT1130 runtime error (Unintended century switch...)

In this case, the century information is changed due to the year sliding window. However, this change is intercepted by the DFSTACK=C setting.

Year Fixed Window

For information on this topic, see the description of the profile parameter YSLW.

Date Format for Default Page Title - DFTITLE Parameter

The session/profile parameter DFTITLE determines the format of the date in a default page title (as output with a DISPLAY, WRITE or PRINT statement).

With the DFTITLE parameter, you can choose one of the following date representations:

DFTITLE=S 8-byte representation with a 2-digit year and delimiters. Example: yy-mm-dd.
DFTITLE=L 10-byte representation with a 4-digit year and delimiters. Example: yyyy-mm-dd.
DFTITLE=I 8-byte representation with a 4-digit year and no delimiters. Example: yyyymmdd.

For each DFTITLE setting, the sequence of the day, month and year and the delimiter characters used are determined by the DTFORM parameter.

The DFTITLE parameter can be set in the Natural parameter module/file, dynamically when Natural is invoked, or at session level. It is evaluated at runtime.

Example:

This example assumes that DTFORM=I applies.

WRITE 'HELLO' 
END
/* 
/* Date in page title if DFTITLE=S is set ...: 14-01-31 
/* Date in page title if DFTITLE=L is set ...: 2014-01-31
/* Date in page title if DFTITLE=I is set ...: 20140131

Note:
The DFTITLE parameter has no effect on a user-defined page title as specified with a WRITE TITLE statement.