MC RPG Developer

August 20, 2008 | Vol 7 Issue 16

 

In This Issue:

Sponsor - T.L. Ashford & Associates
T.L. Ashford is “The Labeling Answer”® for the System i.
Ashford's Barcode400 has been the dependable choice for the industry since 1983. With Barcode400's newly enhanced Graphic Designer no “green screen” interaction is needed for label design. New features include: AFP/HP-compatible printing, easy-to-use graphics import tool, test print to desktop printer, simple font download tool, updated drivers and format listing reports. Even compliance labeling is made easy with design templates. Call 800-541-4893 to order a FREE DEMO CD or visit us at  T.L. Ashford & Associates.

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Feature Article - Programming
Picking the Right Partner for RPG

With all the options available, are you in danger of being blinded by application development science?

joe_pluta.jpgBy Joe Pluta

RPG is no longer a standalone language. Gone are the days of learning RPG alone; you have to interface with the larger IT environment. If you read forums or mailing lists or blogs in the i community, you'll find an almost endless variety of options for exposing your RPG business logic, ranging from the latest tools, like EGL, to some of the more venerable options, such as Net.Data. If you're not careful, you could find yourself falling down the technology rabbit hole, chasing options like PHP or even Python.


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Sponsor - RPG & DB2 Summit
Come to the RPG & DB2 Summit in Las Vegas , October 20-22, for three days of intense, effective education on RPG IV, ILE, SQL, DB2, V6R1, WDSC/RSE/RDi & more. Learn the latest in practical tips and techniques from gurus Susan Gantner, Skip Marchesani, Jon Paris, Paul Tuohy, Scott Klement and others in a highly interactive, fun, invigorating environment. Register today and save $100$1295 registration ends October 3.
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Feature Article - Programming
The API Corner: Finding All *SRVPGMs on the System

Do you know how to use the Open List of Objects (QGYOLOBJ) API?

bruce_vining.jpgBy Bruce Vining

This article is the third in a series that discusses how to find all *PGMs and *SRVPGMs that have a specific *MODULE bound into them. Before reading this article, you may find it beneficial to review the two prior articles, "Module, Module, Who's Got My Module?" and "Finding Modules in a *SRVPGM." While the stated intent is to find all uses of a given module, the actual purpose of this series of articles is to introduce the concepts and proper use of two types of system APIs: List and Open List.


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