To work with files in the PL/I editor, simply double-click the PL/I source file in the PL/I Explorer that you want to edit. You can also right-click the file and choose Open With > PL/I Editor.
You can customize the PL/I editor from the preferences pages in Window > Preferences > Micro Focus > PL/I > Editor. You can configure features such as Smart Edit Mode (wrapping code and indentation), margins, syntax coloring.
The PL/I editor contains all features to aid PL/I coding and editing such as:
Lets you select specific blocks of text in your code. Click the Toggle Block Selection Mode () button in the toolbar or press Alt+Shift+A to alternately enable and disable block selection.
When in Block Selection mode, the cursor changes to a crosshairs cursor, letting you select a block of text. Click and drag to select a text block.
Context breadcrumbs are enabled by default. You can use the Toggle Context Breadcrumbs button () on the toolbar to switch the functionality on and off. The breadcrumbs navigation bar displays at the top of each PL/I editor tab, and lets you quickly view and open programs and include files along the trail of files for the current file. You can also use the breadcrumb navigation for quick context switching between include files.
Code templates are preset snippets of code you can place in your programs. Enterprise Developer provides a number of native PL/I and mainframe PL/I code templates that you can use while writing your code. Press Ctrl + space in the editor to access the code templates using the content assist pop-up.
Available templates display at the bottom of the list. Use the scroll bar in the content assist pop-up to find the template you want in the content assist list. Click once on the desired template name to see the code snippet for the template in a pop-up. Double-click the desired template name to place the template code snippet into your code at the current cursor location.
There is a set of templates for PL/I, and an additional template set for code containing EXEC CICS statements.
You can manage your templates in the Templates Preferences page by clicking .xml files to share with other users.
. You can create new templates, or edit and delete existing templates, as well as import and export templates asContent assist in the PL/I perspective supports PL/I language elements when working in the PL/I editor. Content assist provides editing features to help you write syntactically correct code and to look up available elements. Use content assist to complete words, lookup code, get parameter keywords and aid your code development in other ways.
Press Ctrl + space to get content assistance that is in context with what you are typing in your code. For example, if you are typing a PL/I statement and press Ctrl + space, the list of applicable items appears, with the best match for the statement you are typing highlighted in the content assist pop-up. Any related keywords and templates using the highlighted statement also appear in the pop-up list.
Content assist only offers assistance for the variables and methods that are in scope based on the current cursor position. For variables and methods with ambiguous names, the string inserted is disambiguated.
Preference settings for content assist are not supported.
Dynamic help in the PL/I Editor provides contextual help for PL/I keywords and various language elements in your code. Highlight the desired language element in your code and press F1 or help in the Help viewer for the PL/I statements as you click on them in the code. To open the Help view, click Help > Dynamic Help. This opens the Help viewer and displays reference information for the highlighted item.
The Error indicator actively shows any errors and warnings in your code as you type. Lines containing errors or warnings are indicated with a red x at the beginning of the line. You can hover over the error or warning in the line to see a tool tip that displays additional information.
Find references lets you discover all the places in your current program where a selected language element is. For example, place the cursor anywhere within a procedure name and choose Find References, or press Ctrl + Shift + G. All occurrences of the selected procedure name in the current program display in the search tab under the program name. Each found instance includes the line number where the instance is located. This appears regardless of whether or not Line Numbering is being used.
Folding hides or sections of the program, such as procedures, begin-end blocks, multi-line comments and adjacent comment blocks. You can hover over a collapsed section to show it expanded.
You can configure Eclipse to always fold the multi-line comments at the start of the file. To do this, click Window > Preferences > Micro Focus > PL/I > Editor > Folding and check Fold comment blocks starting on first line of the file.
Go to definition lets you locate the definitions of variables in the code. Click a variable and press F3 to move to the code that declares the variable. You can also hover over a variable anywhere in code to see a tool tip that shows the procedure in which it is defined and other information including the variable definition and the number of times the variable is referenced in the program.
The Horizontal rule runs along the top of the PL/I editor window. It marks the columns with a tick and numbers them into groups of ten. This is helpful when column alignment is required in PL/I programs. Showing or hiding the horizontal rule affects all files open in a PL/I editor tab.
You can configure Eclipse to hide or show the horizontal rule. To do this, click Window > Preferences > Micro Focus > PL/I > Editor and check Show horizontal ruler.
Include Dependency view shows a list of the include files referenced from the current program or include file and any nested include files. Click Include Dependency tab.
to see the current program in the PL/I editor display in theClick the Sort button () in the tab to toggle between a physical or alphabetical sequence. Click Hide Program Structure () to show the program structure and where the include files fit in it, or only show the include files in the current file.
Line numbering helps with collaboration and simplifies code navigation, especially in larger programs. Click the Renumber/Unnumber buttons in the toolbar to alternately insert or remove line numbers in the sources at the right margin. For PL/I, this margin is at column 256.
You can also show line numbering in the left margin of any file in the PL/I editor. Right-click anywhere in the left margin and choose Show Line Numbers to show or hide line numbers. Showing or hiding line numbers affects all files open in a PL/I editor tab.
You can also set the color shown in columns set outside the margins in the Margin color list box.
The editor can automatically set margins based on the project type, but also provides configurable margins for PL/I code at column 1 and 72 for native PL/I programs and at columns 2 and 72 for mainframe subsystem PL/I code. To configure margins, click Window > Preferences > Micro Focus > PL/I > Editor and check or uncheck automatically set margins based on the project type, and set the margins as needed in the Margin columns field.
You can also set the color shown in columns set outside the margins in the Margin color list box.
Mark occurrences highlights all the occurrences of the selected variable in the current file. Click the Toggle Mark Occurrences button () to turn the feature on or off. When turned on, click within the desired variable name to see where else it is used in the current file.
Outline view shows the structure of the program you are editing. This is useful for navigating large programs, for example by clicking on a procedure or a variable declaration to go to it in the code and vice versa - clicking in the code also selects the same block in the Outline view.
The Outline view shows only items from the current editor - if the program is opened in the PL/I editor only items from the current program will be visible and not from its include files. If the program is opened in the Copy View, all items are visible in the editor (the Copy View is a read-only editor) and in the outline.
Double-click items in the Outline view to see how the cursor positions itself on the respective line of code that each one of these outline items refers to and highlights the referenced item in the editor window.
Click the Sort button () for the Outline to toggle between a physical or alphabetical sequence.
You can also use the Outline view to manage program debugging execution. Right-click a line to stop on during debugging and click Toggle Breakpoint to set or clear a debug breakpoint at the selected line. To specify a data item you want to watch or stop watching for certain conditions to be met, right-click to select the data item, then click Toggle Watchpoint.
Quick Outline view lets you see the structure of the current program as a tree view in a pop-up. While working in the PL/I editor, press Ctrl + o or right-click and select Quick Outline to activate the Quick Outline view. You can actively search any string in the program by typing in the entry field at the top of the window. Click any element in the Quick Outline view to move the cursor to the beginning of the line containing the element.
Program Outline view shows the whole program structure of the current PL/I program, including the procedures, statements, variable declarations, and other elements in an expandable and collapsable tree view. You can also see the elements that are in other files. Click Program Outline tab.
to see the current program in the PL/I editor display in theClick a data declaration in the Program Outline view to open the relevant source or include file, and to navigate to the line containing the data item. Similarly, clicking on a data item in the PL/I editor highlights that item in the Program Outline view at the appropriate place in the program outline.
Right-click to select an element in the Program Outline tab and click References to display a listing of where the selected element is referenced in the program. The reference listings appear in the Search tab.
Like the Outline View, you can also use the Program Outline view to manage program debugging execution. See the section Outline View in this topic for details.
Read-only background coloring displays read-only files with a light-yellow colored background in a PL/I Editor window as a visual cue that you cannot edit the file.
You can insert a character in the PL/I editor to indicate a shift out of a single byte input stream into a double byte input stream, then insert another to shift back from a double-byte to a single-byte stream. Press ALT+S, then O to insert the shift-out character to double-byte, and press ALT+S, then I to shift back into single-byte mode after typing the double-byte characters you need. This allows double-byte characters in your PL/I code, particularly Japanese-language characters, as shown in this graphic.
Click the Show Whitespace Characters button () in the toolbar to alternately show and hide whitespace characters in the editor. Whitespace characters include spaces, carriage returns, and end-of-line markers. Showing or hiding whitespace characters affects any PL/I editor window you view. Click the button again to show or hide the characters.
Smart Edit Mode controls code line wrapping behavior when the end of the code area is reached, or when deleting code, as well as line breaking and margins and indentation when creating new lines or using the Tab key. See the topic Configuring Smart Edit Mode for PL/I for more information on setting Smart Edit features for your PL/I programs.
Smart caret lets you customize the behavior of the Home, End, and Tab keys. You can configure how the Home, End and Tab keys move the cursor in the code area.
To do this, click Window > Preferences > Micro Focus > PL/I > Editor to set the various smart caret options. See the topic Customizing the Behavior of Home, End, and Tab Keys for more information.