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This document covers the following topics:
For an explanation of the symbols used in the syntax diagram, see Syntax Symbols.
Related Statement: DEFINE
FUNCTION
The DEFINE PROTOTYPE
statement is used to specify the
properties for calling a
function
including the following:
the parameters to be passed in the function call,
the result value to be returned by the function call, and
whether the function is called with the function name defined in
the DEFINE FUNCTION
statement, or with an alphanumeric variable that contains the function
name.
This information is used to resolve a function call within a Natural object at compile time.
A DEFINE PROTOTYPE
statement is only needed for a
function call if any of the following is true:
The specified function name is an alphanumeric variable which contains the name of the function to be called at execution time.
An
(IR=)
clause is not specified in the
function
call and a cataloged object of the called function is not
available.
The parameters provided in the function call are to be validated and the cataloged object of the called function is not available.
The DEFINE PROTOTYPE
statement can be included in a
copycode object if the function is to be called from multiple objects.
For further information, see the following sections in the Programming Guide:
Natural object type Function
Syntax Element | Description |
---|---|
[VARIABLE]
prototype-name
|
Prototype Name:
|
UNKNOWN
|
UNKNOWN Option:
The keyword |
return-data-definition
|
See Return Data Definition below. |
parameter-definition
|
See Parameter Definition below. |
same-as-clause
|
See SAME AS Clause below. |
USING FUNCTION
[DEFINITION [OF]]
function-name |
USING FUNCTION
Clause: function-name
is the name of an existing cataloged object of the type function. The
parameters and the result field definitions of this function are used to
resolve the function call.
|
END-PROTOTYPE
|
End of DEFINE PROTOTYPE
Statement:
The Natural reserved word |
RETURNS
[variable-name]
|
(format-length [/array-definition]) | |||||||
[(array-definition)]
HANDLE OF OBJECT |
||||||||
( | A |
[/array-definition]) |
DYNAMIC
|
|||||
U |
||||||||
B |
The return-data-definition
clause defines the format/length and, if applicable, the array structure of the
return value.
When no return data definition is specified, a
function
call can only be used within a statement if an explicit
(IR=)
clause is provided. If such a clause is missing, the function can only be
called as a statement, but not in place of an operand within a statement.
Syntax Element Description:
Syntax Element | Description |
---|---|
variable-name |
Return Value Name:
The optional
|
format-length |
Format/Length Definition:
The format and length of the result field. For information on format/length definition of user-defined variables, see Format and Length of User-Defined Variables in the Programming Guide. |
array-definition |
Array Dimension
Definition:
With
For further information, see
Array Dimension
Definition in the description of the |
HANDLE OF
OBJECT |
Handle of Object:
Used in conjunction with NaturalX. |
A ,
U or B |
Data Type:
Alphanumeric (A), Unicode (U) or binary (B) for a dynamic result. |
DYNAMIC |
Dynamic Variable:
The function result may be defined as
For information on processing dynamic variables, see Introduction to Dynamic Variables and Fields in the Programming Guide. |
DEFINE DATA
|
||||||||
PARAMETER UNKNOWN |
||||||||
PARAMETER |
USING parameter-data-area
|
|||||||
parameter-data-definition
... |
... |
|||||||
END-DEFINE
|
The parameter-definition
clause defines the
parameters
which are to be provided in a
function
call. This definition layout is checked against the parameters given
in a function call. If this clause is omitted, this declares the function as
free of parameters. In this case, every attempt to provide parameters in the
function call is rejected.
The identifiers used to name the parameter fields have no meaning.
They are just there to have a syntax structure similar to the DEFINE DATA
PARAMETER
syntax.
Syntax Element Description:
Syntax Element | Description |
---|---|
PARAMETER
UNKNOWN |
UNKNOWN Option:
With this option, no parameter is specified and the parameter check in the function call is disabled. As a consequence, any number of parameters in the function call will be accepted. |
USING
parameter-data-area |
PDA Name:
The name of the
See also Defining Parameter Data
in the |
parameter-data-definition |
Parameter Data Definition:
Instead of defining a parameter data area, parameter data can also be defined directly within a function call. See also Parameter Data
Definition in the |
END-DEFINE |
End of Clause:
The Natural reserved word |
SAME AS
[PROTOTYPE ]
|
prototype-name |
With the SAME AS
clause you can use the parameter and
result field definitions of another prototype which has been defined before in
the same Natural object.
This is a prototype definition for a function named
F#FACTOR
where the
prototype-name
corresponds to the
function-name
specified in the referenced DEFINE
FUNCTION
statement. The result returned by the function is of
format (I2/1:3), and a single parameter of format (I2) is required.
** Example 'DPTEX1': DEFINE PROTOTYPE and function call ************************************************************************ DEFINE DATA LOCAL 1 #NUM (I2) END-DEFINE * DEFINE PROTOTYPE F#FACTOR RETURNS (I2/1:3) DEFINE DATA PARAMETER 1 #VALUE (I2) END-DEFINE END-PROTOTYPE * #NUM := 3 * WRITE 'Function call:' F#FACTOR(<#NUM>)(*) * END
The function F#FACTOR
is defined in the example
function DFUEX2
in library SYSEXSYN
. See
Examples
in the DEFINE FUNCTION
statement description.
DPTEX1
:
Function call: 3 6 9
Due to the keyword VARIABLE
, this prototype specifies
a function call where the referenced
prototype-name
is an alphanumeric
variable which contains the function name at execution time.
** Example 'DPTEX2': DEFINE PROTOTYPE and function call ************************************************************************ DEFINE DATA LOCAL 1 #NAME (A20) 1 #TEXT (A10) END-DEFINE * DEFINE PROTOTYPE VARIABLE #NAME RETURNS #RETURN (A1) DEFINE DATA PARAMETER 1 #IN (A10) END-DEFINE END-PROTOTYPE * #NAME := 'F#FIRST-CHAR' #TEXT := 'ABCDEFGHIJ' * WRITE 'First character:' #NAME(<#TEXT>) * END
The function F#FIRST-CHAR
is defined in the example
function DFUEX1
in library SYSEXSYN
. See
Examples
in the DEFINE FUNCTION
statement description.
DPTEX2
:
First character: A