It is possible to define a single or group data item based on the definition of one defined previously. Use this to make sure that data items with a similar purpose have the same structure.
The SAME AS clause is what makes this possible.
Consider the following example of working-storage data items to store names. The second and third use the SAME AS clause so that all three names are the same size and type.
77 customer-name pic x(50). 77 sales-executive-name same as customer-name. 77 supervisor-name same as customer-name.
You can then move up to 50 characters to each of those data items as follows.
move "Adam Smith" to customer-name move "Alessandra Vivaldi" to sales-executive-name move "Juan Ramirez" to supervisor-name
You can also use the SAME AS clause for group items. Consider the case when you define a date data item with a detailed structure and you want other date items to have the same structure. You can define them as in the following example, with the birth-date using the SAME AS clause:
01 contract-date. 05 dt-yy pic 9(4). 05 filler pic x value "-". 05 dt-mm pic 9(2). 05 filler pic x value "-". 05 dt-dd pic 9(2). 01 birth-date same as contract-date.
And then you can assign values to the child items of each group item as follows:
move 2021 to dt-yy of contract-date move 05 to dt-mm of contract-date move 30 to dt-dd of contract-date move 1990 to dt-yy of birth-date move 10 to dt-mm of birth-date move 17 to dt-dd of birth-date
So, if you display the contract-date and birth-date you would see the following:
contract date: 2021-05-30 birth date: 1990-10-17
Article ID: 321
Created: June 18, 2021
Last Updated: June 18, 2021
Author: Support KB Author
Online URL: https://support.veryant.com/phpkb/article.php?id=321