-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Charles Mills
Sent: Thursday March 09 2006 15:45
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Any products that let you ignore certain messages?
It seems to me that I have seen z/OS products (probably IBM
In a recent note, Ray Mullins said:
Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2006 07:08:05 -0800
Many C/C++ compilers have a #pragma option (varies from compiler to
compiler, of course) that can suppress (and then unsuppress) messages. I
Sometimes allowing the programmer to control the severity of
are hard to ignore.
Charles
-Original Message-
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Ray Mullins
Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006 7:08 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: Any products that let you ignore certain messages?
Sí, yo comprendo, creo
It is our own messages I'm talking about, not the invoked compilers,
and
as
you imply, it's probably most relevant to warning messages, because
things
like can't open input dataset are hard to ignore.
For functions (programs) running on our infrastructure, every function
return passes through
Discussion List [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Paul Gilmartin
Sent: Friday, March 10, 2006 7:59 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@BAMA.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: Any products that let you ignore certain messages?
In a recent note, Ray Mullins said:
Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2006 07:08:05 -0800
Many C/C++ compilers
It seems to me that I have seen z/OS products (probably IBM products, but it
doesn't matter to me so long as they are enterprise products) that allow
the user to specify with a command if I get error message XYZ0123E just let
it go; don't treat it as an error, don't give me a return code 8 or 12
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