HP Search/XL User's Guide : COPYRIGHT NOTICE [ HP Search/XL User's Guide ] MPE/iX 5.0 Documentation
HP Search/XL User's Guide
Product 900 Series HP 3000 Computer Systems
HP Search/XL User's Guide
HP Part No. 36383-90001
Printed in U.S.A.
Printed Apr 1990
Edition First Edition
E0490
________________________________________________________________________
|The information contained in this document is subject to change |
|without notice. |
| |
|HEWLETT-PACKARD MAKES NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND WITH REGARD TO THIS |
|MATERIAL, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF |
|MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Hewlett-Packard |
|shall not be liable for errors contained herein or use of this |
|material. |
| |
|Hewlett-Packard assumes no responsibility for the use or reliability |
|of its software on equipment that is not furnished by Hewlett-Packard.|
| |
|This document contains proprietary information which is protected by |
|copyright. All rights are reserved. No part of this document may be |
|photocopied, reproduced, or translated to another language without the|
|prior written consent of Hewlett-Packard Company. |
________________________________________________________________________
Copyright Æ 1990 by Hewlett-Packard Company
Printing History
The following table lists the printings of this document, together with
the respective release dates for each edition. The software version
indicates the version of the software product at the time this document
was issued. Many product releases do not require changes to the
document. Therefore, do not expect a one-to-one correspondence between
product releases and document editions.
Edition Date Software Version
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
First Edition April 1990 A.00.00
Preface
This is the User's Guide for HP Search/XL. This manual is organized into
the following chapters:
quick reference Summarizes some useful information.
chapter 1 Introduces HP Search and its command interface.
chapter 2 Explains how to use HP Search.
chapter 3 Explains how to specify parameters.
chapter 4 Explains advanced features of HP Search.
chapter 5 Lists error messages and their causes.
Conventions
UPPERCASE In a syntax statement, commands and keywords are
shown in uppercase characters. The characters must
be entered in the order shown; however, you can enter
the characters in either uppercase or lowercase. For
example:
COMMAND
can be entered as any of the following:
command Command COMMAND
It cannot, however, be entered as:
comm com_mand comamnd
italics In a syntax statement or an example, a word in
italics represents an optional parameter or argument
that you must replace with the actual value. In the
following example, you must replace filename with the
name of the file:
COMMAND filename
punctuation In a syntax statement, punctuation characters (other
than brackets, braces, vertical bars, and ellipses)
must be entered exactly as shown. In the following
example, the parentheses and colon must be entered:
(filename):(filename)
underlining Within an example that contains interactive dialog,
user input and user responses to prompts are
indicated by underlining. In the following example,
yes is the user's response to the prompt:
Do you want to continue? >> yes
{ } In a syntax statement, braces enclose required
elements. When several elements are stacked within
braces, you must select one. In the following
example, you must select either ON or OFF:
{ON }
COMMAND {OFF}
[ ] In a syntax statement, brackets enclose optional
elements. In the following example, OPTION can be
omitted:
COMMAND filename [OPTION]
When several elements are stacked within brackets,
you can select one or none of the elements. In the
following example, you can select OPTION or parameter
or neither. The elements cannot be repeated.
[OPTION ]
COMMAND filename [parameter]
Conventions (continued)
[...] In a syntax statement, horizontal ellipses enclosed
in brackets indicate that you can repeatedly select
the element(s) that appear within the immediately
preceding pair of brackets or braces. In the example
below, you can select parameter zero or more times.
Each instance of parameter must be preceded by a
comma:
[,parameter][...]
In the example below, you only use the comma as a
delimiter if parameter is repeated; no comma is used
before the first occurrence of parameter:
[parameter][,...]
|...| In a syntax statement, horizontal ellipses enclosed
in vertical bars indicate that you can select more
than one element within the immediately preceding
pair of brackets or braces. However, each particular
element can only be selected once. In the following
example, you must select A, AB, BA, or B. The
elements cannot be repeated.
{A}
{B} |...|
... In an example, horizontal or vertical ellipses
indicate where portions of an example have been
omitted.
In a syntax statement, the space symbol shows a
required blank. In the following example, parameter
and parameter must be separated with a blank:
(parameter) (parameter)
The symbol indicates a key on the keyboard. For
example, RETURN represents the carriage return key or
Shift represents the shift key.
CTRLcharacter CTRLcharacter indicates a control character. For
example, CTRL Y means that you press the control key
and the Y key simultaneously.
base prefixes The prefixes %, #, and $ specify the numerical base
of the value that follows:
%num specifies an octal number.
#num specifies a decimal number.
$num specifies a hexadecimal number.
If no base is specified, decimal is assumed.
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