It doesn't tell you the highest level instructions you used, but if you are concerned about working within the limitations of certain machines, you can tell it what instruction level to use. If you try to use some instruction that exceeds that set, then you get an error.
I think that is the same thing, just a different approach. Chris Blaicher Technical Architect Software Development Syncsort Incorporated 50 Tice Boulevard, Woodcliff Lake, NJ 07677 P: 201-930-8234 | M: 512-627-3803 E: [email protected] -----Original Message----- From: IBM Mainframe Assembler List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David Cole Sent: Monday, April 27, 2015 1:18 PM To: MVS List Server 2 Subject: Re: Checking hardware level requirements Yes! At 4/27/2015 05:50 AM, Sharuff Morsa wrote: >Wouldn't it be nice if the HLASM listing printed the 'highest' value used? >Sharuff > >Sharuff Morsa - IBM Hursley labs Dave Cole ColeSoft Marketing 414 Third Street, NE Charlottesville, VA 22902 EADDRESS: <mailto:[email protected]>[email protected] Home page: www.colesoft.com User's Group: www.xdc.com (on LinkedIn) Facebook: www.facebook.com/colesoftware Videos: www.youtube.com/user/colesoftware
