Folks Romney White replied off list. He says :- "It's been a long time, but they might be macros I wrote as part of a general CMS interface support library, which I think was packaged as INTLIB MACLIB. Back in the early days of VM/370, we were making lots of OS/MVT compilers and applications run on CMS at the University of Waterloo."
So not from another package. I think I might have to try IBM-MAIN or the VM list Dave Wade PS He says he cant post to the list as Notes attaches an icon and the list rejects his quote. > -----Original Message----- > From: IBM Mainframe Assembler List [mailto:ASSEMBLER- > [email protected]] On Behalf Of Seymour J Metz > Sent: 18 February 2018 19:57 > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: Enhanced Macro Library > > ITYM "OS/360 FORTRAN G"; PCP, MFT and MVT all had the same compilers. > > Those macros could be HASP II V3, HASP II V4 or JES2. My guess would be > HASP II V3. > > > -- > Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz > http://mason.gmu.edu/~smetz3 > > ________________________________________ > From: IBM Mainframe Assembler List <[email protected]> > on behalf of Dave Wade <[email protected]> > Sent: Friday, February 16, 2018 4:50 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Enhanced Macro Library > > Folks, > > > > Perhaps apposite to the recent conversation. I enjoy fiddling with old code. > I was playing with a very old copy of VM which has a very old copy of the MFT > FORTRAN G compiler installed. The heading in the listing file refers to an old > University system. I have the "assembler" source to the CMS interface > routine. Sadly its full of macros which I don't have. They have things like > $PARM , $TESTBUF, $TYPEBUF. Does any one on here have any idea where > they came from? > > > > Dave Wade
