Hello world and hello Texas from Database
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Revision as of 15:06, 10 February 2010 by DavidWhitten (talk | contribs)
Install VistA with something like Astronaut. Get to a Mumps prompt: choose item 3 if you are using VistA Commander.
MUMPS>write "hello world" hello world MUMPS>write "hello " write $P(^DIC(5,48,0),"^",1) hello TEXAS
What the above hello TEXAS line does:
- Invokes the Mumps function $P[iece], which is similar to but not exactly like the substring command in many other languages.
- The ^ indicates that this is not a local variable; Mumps will look for a global stored on disk and visible to other users.
- The global DIC holds the File of Files, but ^DIC with the subscript 5 says to look in file 5 (The STATE File)
- The ^DIC(5, is followed by a 48, which means entry 48 in the STATE File.
- The ^DIC(5,48, is followed by 0 because the NAME Field is stored in node 0 and the first piece.
- Then $P uses the ^ in this case as a delimiter, and returns the first piece.
- Since ^DIC(5,48,0)="TEXAS^TX^48^^1^1", MUMPS writes "TEXAS".