On 15/01/2013 16:26, Brian Hechinger wrote:
On 1/15/2013 11:23 AM, Mark Wickens wrote:
On 15/01/2013 16:11, Brian Hechinger wrote:
What am I missing here? My VMS is way too rusty.
$ unzip :== $dka0:[bin]unzip_axp.exe
$ unzip
%DCL-W-IVVERB, unrecognized command verb - check validity and spelling
\DKA0\
$ dir
Directory DKA0:[BIN]
UNZIP_AXP.EXE;1 VIM-73-AXP.ZIP;1
Total of 2 files.
$
-brian
Works OK for me:
[MSW]SLAVE$ unzip :== $dka0:[bin]unzip_axp.exe
[MSW]SLAVE$ show sym unzip
UNZIP == "$DKA0:[BIN]UNZIP_AXP.EXE"
[MSW]SLAVE$
Yeah, symbol assignment works, just not when i try to actually run it:
$ unzip :== $dka0:[bin]unzip_axp.exe
$ show sym unzip
UNZIP = "DKA0:[BIN]UNZIP_AXP.EXE"
$ unzip
%DCL-W-IVVERB, unrecognized command verb - check validity and spelling
\DKA0\
You don't have a logical name defined for any part of that do you? For example BIN? I
once had an issue because I'd defined a drive name logical as DATA which was then
being translated. I think that's why using a dollar sign after logical name
definitions is good practice for things like drive designators.
no logical named BIN, no.
-brian
Use double quotes around the assignment - for some reason it's not picking up the
dollar.