Macro operator
Topic group Related topics Example
Substitutes the contents of a private or public string variable during the evaluation of a statement.
Syntax
&<character variable>[.]
Description
Macro substitution with the & operator allows you to change the actual text of a program statement at runtime. This capabilities allows you to overcome certain syntactic and architectural limitations in dBL.
The mechanics of macro substitution are as follows. When compiling a statement, in a program or for immediate execution in the Command window, dBASE Plus looks for any single & symbols in the statement. (Double ampersands [&&] denote end-of-line comments.) If something that looks like it could be a variable name—that is, a word made up of letters, numbers, and underscores—immediately follows the & symbol, its location is noted during compilation. If a period (.) happens to immediately follow the word, that period is considered to be a macro terminator.
When the statement is executed, dBASE Plus searches for a private or public variable with that name. If that variable exists, and that variable is a character variable, the contents of that variable are substituted in the statement in the place of the & symbol, the variable name, and the terminating period, if any. This is referred to as macro substitution. If no private or public variable with that name can be found, or if the variable is not a character variable, nothing happens; the statement is executed as-is.
Note
The & character is also used as the pick character in the text property of some form and menu components. For example, if you use the string "&Close" to designate the letter C as the pick character, if you happen to have a private or public variable named close, it will be substituted.
If macro substitution occurs, one of two things can happen:
Some commands expect certain kinds macro substitution. If the substitution is one of those cases, the command can immediately use the substituted value. For example, SET commands which expect either ON or OFF as the final word in the statement are optimized in this way.
If the substituted value is not an expected case, or if the command or statement does not expect macro substitution, the entire statement in its new form is recompiled on-the-fly and executed.
Recompiling the statement takes a small amount of time that is negligible unless you are constantly recompiling in a loop. Also, local and static variables may be out-of-scope when a recompiled statement is executed.
You cannot use the & operator immediately after a dot operator. You also cannot have the & and dot operators on the left side of an assignment operator; that is, you cannot assign to a property that is partially resolved with macro substitution. If you do either of these, a compile-time error occurs. You can assign to a property that is completely resolved with macro substitution, or use the STORE command instead of an assignment operator.
The macro terminator (a period, the same character as the dot operator) is required if you want to abut the macro variable name with a letter, number, underscore or dot operator. Compare the following examples:
&ftext // The macro variable ftext
&f.text // The macro variable f followed by the word text
&f..text // The macro variable f followed by the dot operator and the word text