Tests for the absence of a field value. A conditional expression that includes MISSING is true if the value specified by the dbfield-expression is missing. If you precede the MISSING expression with the optional NOT qualifier, the condition is true if the field contains a value.
1 – Examples
The following programs demonstrate the use of the MISSING and NOT MISSING conditional expressions. These programs form a record stream containing the records in the COLLEGES relation that have nothing stored in the field STATE, but do have a college code stored in the field COLLEGE_CODE. Each record in the COLLEGES relation is tested for the above condition; if a record meets the condition these programs print an informational message and the college code of the newest record added to the record stream.
1.1 – C Example
#include <stdio.h> DATABASE PERS = FILENAME "PERSONNEL"; main() { READY PERS; START_TRANSACTION READ_WRITE; FOR C IN COLLEGES WITH C.STATE MISSING AND C.COLLEGE_CODE NOT MISSING; printf ("State Missing for COLLEGE: %s\n", C.COLLEGE_CODE); END_FOR; COMMIT; FINISH; }
1.2 – Pascal Example
program missing (input,output); DATABASE PERS = FILENAME 'PERSONNEL'; begin READY PERS; START_TRANSACTION READ_WRITE; FOR C IN COLLEGES WITH C.STATE MISSING AND C.COLLEGE_CODE NOT MISSING; writeln ('State Missing for COLLEGE:', C.COLLEGE_CODE); END_FOR; COMMIT; FINISH; end.
2 – Format
(B)0[mmissing-cond-expr qqq> db-field-expr qqq>qqqqwqq>qqqqqqqwqq> [4mMISSING[m qqq> mqq> [4mNOT[m qqj
2.1 – Format arguments
db-field-expr A database field value expression. A field name qualified with a context variable.