Variable binding in INPUT ARRAY
INPUT ARRAY
statement binds the members of the array of record to the screen array fields specified with the
FROM
keyword. Array members and screen array fields are bound by position
(not by name). The number of members in the program array must match the number of fields in the
screen record (that is, in a single row of the screen
array).SCHEMA stock
DEFINE cust_arr DYNAMIC ARRAY OF customer.*
...
INPUT ARRAY cust_arr FROM sr.*
ATTRIBUTES(UNBUFFERED)
...
END INPUT
ARRAY OF RECORD /
END RECORD
. However, the array can be structured with sub-records and still be used with an
INPUT ARRAY
dialog. This is especially useful when you need to define arrays from
database tables, and additional information needs
to be managed at runtime (for example to hold image resource for each row, to be displayed with the
IMAGECOLUMN
attribute):SCHEMA shop
DEFINE a_items DYNAMIC ARRAY OF RECORD
item_data RECORD LIKE items.*,
it_image STRING,
it_count INTEGER
END RECORD
...
INPUT ARRAY a_items FROM sr.*
...
When using a static array, the initial number of rows is defined by the COUNT
attribute and the size of the array determines how many rows can be inserted. When using a
dynamic array, the initial number of rows is defined by the number of elements in the dynamic
array (the COUNT
attribute is ignored), and the maximum rows is unlimited.
For both static and dynamic arrays, the maximum number of rows the user can enter can be
defined with the MAXCOUNT
attribute.
The FROM
clause binds the screen records in the screen array to the program
records of the program array. The form can include other fields that are not part of the
specified screen array, but the number of member variables in each record of the program array
must equal the number of fields in each row of the screen array. When the user enters data, the
runtime system checks the entered value against the data type of the variable, not the data type
of the screen field.
INPUT ARRAY
instruction. Always use the variables if you want to
change some field values by program. When using the UNBUFFERED
attribute, the instruction
is sensitive to program variable changes. If you need to display new data during the INPUT
ARRAY
execution, use the UNBUFFERED
attribute and assign the values
to the program array row; the runtime system will automatically display the values to the
screen:INPUT ARRAY p_items FROM s_items.*
ATTRIBUTES(UNBUFFERED)
ON CHANGE code
IF p_items[arr_curr()].code = "A34" THEN
LET p_items[arr_curr()].desc = "Item A34"
END IF
END INPUT
The runtime system adapts input and display rules to the data type of the array record members.
If a member is declared with the DEFINE LIKE
instruction and uses a column defined
as SERIAL
/ SERIAL8
/ BIGSERIAL
, the runtime
system will treat the field as if it was defined with the NOENTRY
attribute in the form file.
Since values of serial columns are automatically generated by the database server, no user input is
required for such fields.
The default order in which the focus moves from field to field in the screen array is determined
by the declared order of the corresponding member variables, in the array of the record definition.
The program OPTIONS
instruction can also change the behavior of the INPUT
ARRAY
instruction, with the INPUT WRAP
or FIELD ORDER
FORM
options. For more details, see Defining the tabbing order.
By default the INPUT ARRAY
instruction clears the program array when starting,
unless you specify the WITHOUT DEFAULTS
keywords or option. With this option, the
dialog displays the program array rows in the screen fields. Unlike the INPUT
dialog, the column default values defined in the form specification file with the
DEFAULT
attribute or in the database
schema files are always used when a new row is inserted in the list.
If the program array has the same structure as a database table (this is the case when the array
is defined with a DEFINE LIKE
clause), you may not want to display/use some
of the columns. You can achieve this by using PHANTOM
fields in the screen
array definition. Phantom fields will only be used to bind program variables, and will not be
transmitted to the front-end for display.