HELPLIB.HLB  —  CMS  DELETE  GENERATION
    Deletes one or more generations of an element.

       Format:

          DELETE GENERATION  element-expression "remark"

1  –  Restrictions

    o  You cannot delete generation 1 of an element.
    o  You cannot delete a generation that has variants off it.
    o  You cannot delete a generation that has a review pending.
    o  You cannot delete a generation that is reserved.
    o  You cannot delete a generation that is in a class.
    o  All generations in the specified range of generations to be
       deleted must be on the same line of descent.
    o  You cannot use /GENERATION in combination with /AFTER, /BEFORE,
       /FROM, or /TO.
    o  You cannot specify /AFTER and /FROM on the same command line.
    o  You cannot specify /BEFORE and /TO on the same command line.

2  –  Command Parameters

 element-expression

    Specifies one or more generations of an element. An element
    expression can be an element name, a group name, a wildcard
    expression, or a list of these separated by commas.

 remark

    Specifies a character string to be logged in the history file
    with this command, usually used to explain why the command was
    entered. The remark is enclosed in quotation marks. If no remark
    was entered, a null remark ("") is logged.

3  –  Description

    The DELETE GENERATION command removes information about one or
    more generations of an element. Once a generation is deleted, it
    cannot be restored to its former place in the element in the CMS
    library. You can, however, archive the contents of the generation
    using the /ARCHIVE qualifier and later restore the contents of the
    generation.

    If the generation or range of generations to be deleted has a
    direct descendant generation (that is, a descendant generation on
    the same line of descent), then the changes associated with those
    generations are combined, and then those changes are combined
    with the changes in the descendant generation. If there is
    no descendant generation, that is, the generation or range of
    generations to be deleted is at the end of the line of descent,
    then the changes associated with those generations are discarded.

    You can specify a single generation with the /GENERATION
    qualifier. /GENERATION=1+ is the default. You can also specify
    a range of generations with either the /AFTER or /FROM qualifier
    to delimit the beginning of a range, and either the /BEFORE or /TO
    qualifier to delimit the end of a range. These sets of qualifiers
    can be paired to specify ranges with inclusive or exclusive
    endpoints (see the restriction section).

    If you delete the latest generation on the main line of descent of
    an element that has the reference copy attribute, CMS deletes the
    generation's reference copy and creates a new reference copy that
    corresponds to the generation that is now the latest generation on
    the main line of descent.

4  –  Qualifiers

4.1    /AFTER[=generation-expression]

    Specifies the start of a range of generations that are to be
    deleted, excluding the specified generation. You cannot specify
    both /AFTER and /FROM or both /AFTER and /GENERATION. You must
    specify the end of the range with either the /BEFORE or /TO
    qualifier.

4.2    /ARCHIVE=[file-specification]

    Specifies a file to which CMS writes archived generation
    information. If the file specification is omitted, CMS creates
    a file for each with the same name as the element and the .CMS_
    ARCHIVE file type and places it in your default directory.

4.3    /BEFORE[=generation-expression]

    Specifies the end of a range of generations that are to be
    deleted, excluding the specified generation. You cannot specify
    both /BEFORE and /TO or both /BEFORE and /GENERATION. You must
    specify the start of the range with either the /AFTER or /FROM
    qualifier.

4.4    /CONFIRM (D)

    Controls whether CMS prompts you for confirmation before each
    transaction.

    When you run CMS in interactive mode, CMS prompts you for
    confirmation. If you type YES, ALL, TRUE, or 1, CMS executes the
    transaction. If you type NO or QUIT or press RETURN, no action
    is performed. If you type any other character, CMS continues to
    prompt until you type an acceptable response.

    CMS does not prompt for confirmation in batch mode.

4.5    /FROM[=generation-expression]

    Specifies the start of a range of generations that are to be
    deleted, including the specified generation. You cannot specify
    both /FROM and /AFTER or both /FROM and /GENERATION. You must
    specify the end of the range with either the /BEFORE or /TO
    qualifier.

4.6    /GENERATION[=generation-expression]

    Specifies a particular generation of the element to be deleted. By
    default, the most recent generation on the main line of descent is
    deleted. You cannot combine /GENERATION with any of the following
    qualifiers: /FROM, /TO, /AFTER, and /BEFORE.

4.7    /LOG (D)

    Controls whether CMS displays success and informational messages
    on the default output device. By default, if the command executes
    successfully, CMS displays a success message. If you specify
    /NOLOG, success and informational messages are suppressed. Any
    warning, error, or fatal error messages are displayed regardless
    of whether /LOG or /NOLOG is specified.

4.8    /OCCLUDE[=option,...]

    Controls whether CMS selects the first instance of the specified
    object, or all instances of the specified object in the library
    search list. The options field contains one or more keywords
    associated with the name of the object. The options field can
    contain the following keywords:

       ALL--equivalent to ELEMENT
       ELEMENT (D)
       NOELEMENT
       NONE--equivalent to NOELEMENT

    You can specify either ALL, NONE, or the [NO]ELEMENT keyword.

    By default, CMS performs occlusion for all objects; that is, CMS
    selects only the first occurrence of a specified object.

4.9    /TO[=generation-expression]

    Specifies the end of a range of generations that are to be
    deleted, including the specified generation. You cannot specify
    both /TO and /BEFORE or both /TO and /GENERATION. You must specify
    the start of the range with either the /AFTER or /FROM qualifier.

5  –  Examples

    (1) CMS> DELETE GENERATION/NOCONFIRM SAMPLE.PAS/GENERATION=5B1
        _Remark: Delete variant line
        %CMS-S-GENDELETED, 1 generation of element
        DISKX:[PROJECT.CMSLIB]SAMPLE.PAS deleted

      This command deletes generation 5B1 of the element SAMPLE.PAS.
      The /NOCONFIRM qualifier directs CMS to suppress the prompt
      confirming the operation.

    (2) CMS> DELETE GENERATION SAMPLE.*/AFTER=V1/BEFORE=V2
        _Remark: delete generations between released versions
        Delete 5 generations after V1(1) before V2(7) of element SAMPLE.PAS?
        [Y/N] (N): Y
        %CMS-S-GENDELETED, 5 generations of element
        DISKX:[PROJECT.CMSLIB]SAMPLE.PAS deleted

      This command deletes all generations of the element after the
      generation in class V1 and before the generation in class V2,
      excluding the two generations in classes V1 and V2.

    (3) CMS> DELETE GENERATION SAMPLE.PAS/AFTER=1/BEFORE=V1
        _Remark: delete a range
        %CMS-E-NOGENDELETED, no generations of
        DISKX:[PROJECT.CMSLIB]SAMPLE.PAS deleted
        -CMS-E-VARINRANGE, range has variants

        CMS> DELETE GENERATION/ARCHIVE/FROM=2A1/TO=2A1+/NOCONFIRM SAMPLE.PAS
        _Remark: delete the variant range and archive the deleted generations
        %CMS-S-GENDELETED, 3 generations of element
        DISKX:[PROJECT.CMSLIB]SAMPLE.PAS deleted

      The first command specifies that all generations be deleted
      between generation 1 and the generation in class V1. CMS could
      not delete the generations, however, because it found variants
      for the indicated generations.

      The second command specifies a range of generations to be
      deleted from and including the variant generation 2A1 to
      and including the latest variant generation of the element
      SAMPLE.PAS. In this case, CMS deleted 3 generations of the
      element. The /ARCHIVE qualifier directs CMS to save the deleted
      generations in an archive file in your default directory.

      To display the descendants of a generation and the
      classes containing the generations, use the SHOW
      GENERATION/DESCENDANTS/MEMBER command.
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