source: IHS-VA_UTILITIES-XB/XBFNC.m@ 641

Last change on this file since 641 was 641, checked in by Sam Habiel, 15 years ago

Initial commit of XB, move away from sf.net.
Includes kids file and documentation.

File size: 5.3 KB
Line 
1XBFNC ;IHS/SET/GTH - Field Numbering Conventions ; [ 10/29/2002 7:42 AM ]
2 ;;4.0;XB;;Jul 20, 2009;Build 2
3 ; XB*3*9 IHS/SET/GTH XB*3*9 10/29/2002
4 ;
5 ; Given an input of files, check the fields in the files
6 ; for conformance to the SAC field numbering conventions.
7 ;
8 ; Can also print conventions.
9 ;
10Q ; F = File
11 ; H = Header
12 ; I = Field
13 ; N = Node
14 ; P = Piece
15 ;
16 W !,"FileMan Field Numbering Conventions",!
17 D FNC,^XBDSET
18 Q:'$D(^UTILITY("XBDSET",$J))
19 NEW F
20 S F=0
21 F S F=$O(^UTILITY("XBDSET",$J,F)) Q:'F D FILE(F)
22 Q
23 ;
24FILE(F) ;
25 NEW I,H,N,P
26 S I=0
27 F S I=$O(^DD(F,I)) Q:'I I '($P(^(I,0),U,2)["C") D
28 . S H=0
29 . I +$P(^DD(F,I,0),U,2) D Q
30 .. I $L(I)'=4 D ERR(1)
31 .. D FILE(+$P(^DD(F,I,0),U,2))
32 ..Q
33 . S N=$P($P(^DD(F,I,0),U,4),";",1),P=$P($P(^(0),U,4),";",2)
34 . I N=0 D Q
35 .. I $E(I)'="." D ERR(2)
36 .. I P'=+$P(I,".",2)!(+$P(I,".")) D ERR(3)
37 .. I P=10 D ERR(4)
38 ..Q
39 . I $E(I)="." D ERR(5)
40 . I +N,N'=+$E(I,1,$L(N)) D ERR(6)
41 . I +N,P'=+$E(I,$L(N)+1,99) D ERR(7)
42 . I 'N,P'=I D ERR(8)
43 .Q
44 Q
45 ;
46ERR(E) ;
47 W:'H !," ",F," (",$O(^DD(F,0,"NM","")),"), ",I," (",$P(^DD(F,I,0),U,1),"), global location ",$P(^(0),U,4),$S(+P:"",1:"(Multiple)")
48 S H=1
49 W !?5,$P($T(@E),";",3),"."
50 Q
51 ;
521 ;;Field number of multiple field is not 4 digits
532 ;;Field number in 0th node should begin with '.'
543 ;;Piece number in 0th node should = +$P(fld#,".",2)
554 ;;Piece 10 of 0th node should be null
565 ;;Field begins with '.' and not in 0th node
576 ;;Field number does not begin with node location
587 ;;Piece number does not match non-nodal part of field number
598 ;;Field number and piece number do not match
60 ;
61FNC ;
62 Q:'$$DIR^XBDIR("Y","Print conventions","N")
63 D ^%ZIS
64 Q:POP
65 U IO
66 D HELP^XBHELP("TXT","XBFNC",0),^%ZISC
67 Q
68 ;
69TXT ;
70 ;;
71 ;; -------------------------------
72 ;; DATA DICTIONARY FIELD NUMBERING
73 ;; AND DATA PLACEMENT CONVENTIONS
74 ;; -------------------------------
75 ;;
76 ;;The following conventions for numbering fields, and placing data in pieces, is
77 ;;extracted from a mail message dated 25 Feb 88, and is considered to be those
78 ;;conventions referred to in the Programming Standards And Conventions paragraph
79 ;;which states "Field numbers for FileMan files will be assigned in accordance
80 ;;with established conventions."
81 ;;
82 ;; = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
83 ;;
84 ;;1) There is a direct correlation between the field number and the node and
85 ;;piece, and for multiples, between the field number and the sub-file number.
86 ;;
87 ;;2) Fields beginning with a "." are all .01-.n and are in the 0th node. Where
88 ;;possible, files only have a 0th node. This reduces the number of disc accesses
89 ;;required. A field number must be canonic, therefore, there is no .10 field.
90 ;;It goes from .09 to .11. That means piece 10 will always be NULL.
91 ;;
92 ;;3) Where the entire entry cannot be put in one node, there are more nodes,
93 ;;generally grouped by logically related fields into field numbers within some
94 ;;range, say 1101-1116. These would be node 11 piece 1-16, and in this case
95 ;;piece 10 is allowed because it is canonic.
96 ;;
97 ;;4) Multiple fields are always 4 digits. The first two digits are the next
98 ;;higher group, using the example above, 11 would be the next higher group. The
99 ;;second two digits are always 00. The subscript for that multiple is always the
100 ;;first two digits of the multi-valued field number. 11 in this case. The
101 ;;sub-file number is always the parent file number with the first two digits of
102 ;;the multi-valued field number appended. If we were in file 9000001 in the
103 ;;above example, the sub-file for field 1100 would be 9000001.11, and the
104 ;;subscript would be 11. Now, if we added a multiple to that sub-file, as say
105 ;;field number 1500, its sub-file would be 9000001.1115 and its subscript would
106 ;;be 15. In the data global it would look like ^AUPNPAT(DA(1),11,DA,15,0). The
107 ;;assigning of sub-file numbers is important, because if you let FileMan do it,
108 ;;he will assign numbers that may fall within the number space of primary files
109 ;;using our file number assigning logic.
110 ;;
111 ;;5) There are special cases that do not follow the rules, of course. On most
112 ;;of the pointed to files, we have added a field number 9901 MNEMONIC which is
113 ;;used on a site by site basis if you have a very high percentage of your lookups
114 ;;to two or three entries, you can add data to the MNEMONIC field, say 1, 2, and
115 ;;3, and instead of responding CLAREMORE to a LOCATION lookup, you can respond 1.
116 ;;This field is in node 88 piece 1. It is 8801 so the MNEMONIC field would be
117 ;;the same number in all dictionaries, regardless of how many fields, and field
118 ;;numbers, a particular file had already.
119 ;;
120 ;;6) Computed fields, where ever possible, immediately follow the field from
121 ;;which they are computed, and the computed field number is the same as the real
122 ;;field followed by a 9. If the field above was .12 the computed field would be
123 ;;.129. If you wanted more than one computed field off of .12 they would be
124 ;;.1291 and .1292.
125 ;;
126 ;;7) There is another class of computed field. That is a computed field that
127 ;;points back to the VA PATIENT file. Those fields have a .2 following the field
128 ;;number. That indicates it is not really a computed field, but just a pointer
129 ;;back to the VA PATIENT file.
130 ;;
131 ;;********************************************
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