| 000 | 03946 a2200265 4500 | ||
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| 008 | 250318s########|||||||||||||||||||||||#d | ||
| 020 | _a0-07-006583-7 | ||
| 040 |
_aGAMADERO2 _bspa _cGAMADERO2 |
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| 100 | _aHarvey bookman | ||
| 245 | _aCOBOL / 370 for vs cobol and cobol ll programmers / | ||
| 250 | _a1ERA EDICION | ||
| 260 |
_bMcGraw-Hill _aUnited States _c1993 |
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| 300 |
_a355 _bIlustraciones, tablas, graficas _c23cm |
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| 490 | 0 | _aseries | |
| 504 | _aeditorial McGraw-Hill ISBN 0-07-006583-7 | ||
| 505 | _aPart 1 COBOL II Release 2 Chapter 1. Release 2-VS COBOL Features Eliminated and Conversions 1.1 COBOL Releases 1.1.1 COBOL II Releases 1.1.2 COBOL/370 1.2 Features Completely Eliminated 1.3 SEARCH ALL Statement Syntax 1.4 READY TRACE 1.5 ON Statement 1.6 INSPECT, EXAMINE, and TRANSFORM 1.7 EXHIBIT AND DISPLAY 1.7.1 LIST Command in COBOL Debugger 1.8 ACCEPT and MOVE of Date and Time 1.9 REMARKS and NOTE 1.10 Qualification of Index Names 1.11 Reserved Words 1.12 Inconsistencies between VS COBOL and COBOL II 1.12.1 Unexpected and Concealed COBOL II Differences 1.13 Conversion Chapter 2. Updated Features from VS COBOL to Release 2 2.1 Extended FILE STATUS Codes 2.2 OCCURS DEPENDING ON 2.3 Floating-Point Numbers 2.3.1 Exponentiation 2.4 VALUE Clauses 2.5 CALL Statements 2.6 PERFORMS 2.6.1 Traditional Out-of-Line PERFORMS 2.6.2 In-Line PERFORMS 2.7 Error Processing 2.8 Compiler Limits 2.9 Level Numbers 2.10 COPY Statement 2.11 Sections 2.12 WHEN-COMPILED Special Register Chapter 3. New Features in Release 2 3.1 Explicit Scope Terminators 3.2 CONTINUE Statement 3.3 INITIALIZE Statement 3.3.1 REPLACING Clause 3.3.2 Group Items 3.4 EVALUATE Statement 3.4.1 Comparison of EVALUATE and IF Statements 3.4.2 Placing Expressions in the EVALUATE or WHE Portions 3.4.3 Using the THRU Clause 3.5 SET Statement 3.6 TITLE Statement 3.7 Double Byte Character Set (DBCS) 3.7.1 DBCS Class Test 3.7.2 Service Routines for DBCS Manipulation Chapter 4. Updates to Compiler Options 4.1 Compiler Option Name Changes 4.2 FLAG Option 4.3 SSRANGE Option 4.4 RENT and DATA Options 4.4.1 AMODE and RMODE 4.5 NUMPROC Option 4.6 FASTSRT Option 4.7 TEST Option 4.7.1 The Interactive Debugger 4.7.2 Batch Mode Debugger 4.7.3 Replacement of VS COBOL READY TRACE 4.7.4 Replacement of VS COBOL FLOW 4.7.5 Replacement of VS COBOL COUNT 4.7.6 WHEN Command 4.7.7 COBOL Compiler Options Assumed by Debug Chapter 5. Updates to Compiler Listings and Procedures 5.1 Program and Statement Nesting Levels 5.2 Cross-References 5.2.1 Imbedded Cross-Reference 5.2.2 Cross-Reference of Data-Names 5.2.3 Cross-Reference of Procedures 5.2.4 Cross-Reference | ||
| 520 | _aDuring the last fifteen years I have seen articles stating that COBOL will become a dead language. What did these writers expect compa-nies to do with the billions of lines of COBOL code that exist? Did they expect companies to retrain the hundreds of thousands of pro-grammers that were using COBOL? With IBM's introduction of COBOL II in 1984, COBOL/370 in 1992 and the inclusion of COBOL as a supported language of Systems Application Architecture (SAA), it seems clear that COBOL is here to stay. Companies are spending tremendous amounts of money to convert their programs to these new standards. Eased program maintenance and features that take advantage of the most modern coding and hardware technology are the minimums expected from these new COBOL compilers | ||
| 526 | _aIngeniería en Tecnologías de la Información y Comunicación | ||
| 650 | 0 |
_aIngeniería en tecnologias de la información y comunicaciones _9585 |
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| 942 |
_cLIB _2ddc _e1ERA EDICION |
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| 945 |
_a1 _badmin _c1261 _dJenny Viridiana Quiroz Linares |
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| 999 |
_c2047 _d2047 |
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