I am running following code on Mainframe system and INDEX function is giving unexpected results.
DATA DATA01;
FILE OUTFIL ;
V = TRIM(LEFT(SCAN(' 05 WAAA-ZZ PIC S9(4) COMP.',2, ' ' ))) ;
I = INDEX(' MOVE WAAA-ZZ(1) TO WBBB-RESP-ZZ ', V ) ;
PUT V ;
PUT I ;
RUN ;
On output file it is showing
WAAA-ZZ (i.e. value stored in V)
0 (i.e. value of I - which mean it has not found WAAA-ZZ in the given string, however we can see that it is present there)
Can anyone explain why it is behaving in this way?
You are placing the TRIM() function in the wrong place. SAS stores character variables as fixed length strings padded with spaces. So in the assignment statement SAS will just put the trailing spaces back onto the value of V to pad it out to fill the fixed length.
V = SCAN(' 05 WAAA-ZZ PIC S9(4) COMP.',2, ' ' ) ;
I = INDEX(' MOVE WAAA-ZZ(1) TO WBBB-RESP-ZZ ', Trim(V) ) ;
or
I = INDEX(' MOVE WAAA-ZZ(1) TO WBBB-RESP-ZZ '
,SCAN(' 05 WAAA-ZZ PIC S9(4) COMP.',2, ' ' )
) ;
You are placing the TRIM() function in the wrong place. SAS stores character variables as fixed length strings padded with spaces. So in the assignment statement SAS will just put the trailing spaces back onto the value of V to pad it out to fill the fixed length.
V = SCAN(' 05 WAAA-ZZ PIC S9(4) COMP.',2, ' ' ) ;
I = INDEX(' MOVE WAAA-ZZ(1) TO WBBB-RESP-ZZ ', Trim(V) ) ;
or
I = INDEX(' MOVE WAAA-ZZ(1) TO WBBB-RESP-ZZ '
,SCAN(' 05 WAAA-ZZ PIC S9(4) COMP.',2, ' ' )
) ;
Thanks for your help Tom. It worked correctly when I placed the TRIM function in correct statement.
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