Reviews table handling, file processing, subprogram interface, advanced features, a comparison of COBOL-74 and COBOL-85, and ANSI COBOL reserved words.
For those who have used VS COBOL, basic COBOL II, or COBOL II Release 2 and would like to learn more about COBOL II Release 3, this book is a must. The author covers programming techniques, debugging, and problems determination techniques.
A guide to VS Cobol II, the latest mainframe Cobol compiler from IBM. Covers changes and improvements to the Cobol language itself, as well as new compiler features and debugging tools. Discusses the differences between VS Cobol II and the OS/VS Cobol and older versions of Cobol, including operation of the compiler and of object programs. Incorporates structured programming concepts, short programming exercises, COBTEST, and conversion of existing programs to VS Cobol II, and covers Release 3 of Cobol II.
This identifies new and revised commands, the impact of the new version on VSAM and CICS, converting from OS/VS COBOL, and optimizing code under VS COBOL II. Tells which features from the older versions are no longer available. No bibliography. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Explains COBOL as it exists in the new ANSI standard. Designed for advanced programmers, it eases the transition from general programming training to the programming done in business applications using COBOL. Through hundreds of practical examples, it explores the intricacies of COBOL without spending a lot of time on basic computer concepts. With an emphasis on cross-system application and development, it describes both IBM's VS COBOL II for the mainframe environment and Microsoft's COBOL for the personal computer.
The IBM® CICS® Interdependency Analyzer (CICS IA®) is a runtime tool for use with IBM CICS Transaction Server for z/OS®. CICS IA allows both system programmers and application developers to get an understanding of the relationships and dependencies of your CICS applications and the environment on which they run. By analyzing data collected by CICS IA, you can make changes to your environment in a safe and controlled but timely manner to address changing demands on your business applications. In this IBM Redbooks® publication, we first provide a detailed overview of what CICS IA is and what business issues it addresses before we review how to configure CICS IA to collect the data that you require with the minimum provenance impact. We then show how you can analyze this data to assist with day-to-day application changes and major projects such as application onboarding.