Hello,
Why the ampersand (&) is not required for macro variable filrf in this example ?
%let filrf=myfile;
%let rc=%sysfunc(filename(filrf, physical-filename));
%if &rc ne 0 %then
%put %sysfunc(sysmsg());
%let rc=%sysfunc(filename(filrf));
Because filerf is the name you passed to the filename reference to create the reference. If you used the ampersand in both cases it works as well. That's the key - use it both or don't use it both.
%let filrf=myfile; %let rc=%sysfunc(filename(filrf, physical-filename)); <- if this was &filrf you need it in the next step as well. If not, it's the string filrf.
This should work just as well, and probably what you want. If you check for the existence or to use myfile that will not exist with the above code.
%let filrf=myfile;
%let rc=%sysfunc(filename(&filrf, physical-filename));
%if &rc ne 0 %then
%put %sysfunc(sysmsg());
%let rc=%sysfunc(filename(&filrf));
Because filerf is the name you passed to the filename reference to create the reference. If you used the ampersand in both cases it works as well. That's the key - use it both or don't use it both.
%let filrf=myfile; %let rc=%sysfunc(filename(filrf, physical-filename)); <- if this was &filrf you need it in the next step as well. If not, it's the string filrf.
This should work just as well, and probably what you want. If you check for the existence or to use myfile that will not exist with the above code.
%let filrf=myfile;
%let rc=%sysfunc(filename(&filrf, physical-filename));
%if &rc ne 0 %then
%put %sysfunc(sysmsg());
%let rc=%sysfunc(filename(&filrf));
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