Dumps data from a structure as XML into a buffer. The XML can then be passed to other applications, including code using the PL/I SAX parser.
XMLCHAR(x, p, n)
x is a structure-reference.
The structure-reference x must contain only string and numeric data.
The structure-reference x can contain substructures. However, any contained substructure can not use an asterisk (*) in place of a name. You can use an asterisk can as a base element name, but the unnamed element is not written to the target buffer.
p is the address of the target buffer.
n is the length of the target buffer.
The buffer length must have a computational type. It is converted to FIXED BINARY(31,0).
The buffer length must be a non-negative length.
This code sample:
XMLCHAR: PROC() OPTIONS(MAIN); DCL 1 REDSOX, 5 WINS(5) FIXED BIN(31) INIT(1,2,3,4,5), 5 PITCHERS(5) CHAR(15) VARYING INIT('Clay Buchholtz', 'Jon Lester', 'John Lackey', 'Ryan Dempster', 'Koji Uehara'); DCL BUFFER CHAR(4000); DCL LEN FIXED BIN(31); LEN = XMLCHAR(REDSOX, ADDRDATA(BUFFER), STG(BUFFER)); PUT SKIP LIST(SUBSTR(BUFFER, 1, LEN)); END;
Writes the following to the buffer.
<REDSOX><WINS>1</WINS><WINS>2</WINS><WINS>3</WINS><WINS>4</WINS><WINS>5</WINS><PITCHERS>Clay Buchholtz</PITCHERS><PITCHERS>Jon Lester</PITCHERS><PITCHERS>John Lackey</PITCHERS><PITCHERS>Ryan Dempster</PITCHERS><PITCHERS>Koji Uehara</PITCHERS></REDSOX>
None.
Description
The XMLCHAR function returns the number of bytes written to the buffer. If the buffer is too small, the structure data is truncated and the number of bytes needed for the buffer to contain the structure is returned.
The following occurs when the data from the specified structure is dumped to a buffer as XML: