The LET statement assigns values to variables.
LET target = expr [,...]
The LET statement assigns a value to a variable, or a set of values to all members of a RECORD by using the .* notation.
The runtime system applies data type conversion rules if the data type of expression does not correspond to the data type of target.
When assigning a numeric of date/time value to a character string variable, the values are formatted for display (for example, the numeric data is right-aligned).
When specifying a comma-separated list of expressions for the right operand, the LET statement concatenates all expressions together. Unlike the || operator, if an expression in the comma-separated list evaluates to NULL, the concatenation result will not be null, except if all expressions to the right of the equal sign are null.
The target variable can be record followed by dot + star (record.*), to reference all record members of the record. In this case, the right operand must also be a record using this notation, and all members will be assigned individually.
Variables defined with a complex data type (like TEXT or BYTE) can only be assigned to NULL.
SCHEMA stores MAIN DEFINE c1, c2 RECORD LIKE customer.* -- Single variable assignment LET c1.customer_num = 123 -- Complete RECORD assignment LET c1.* = c2.* END MAIN