1 | XBFNC ;IHS/SET/GTH - Field Numbering Conventions ; [ 10/29/2002 7:42 AM ]
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2 | ;;4.0;XB;;Jul 20, 2009;Build 2
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3 | ; XB*3*9 IHS/SET/GTH XB*3*9 10/29/2002
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4 | ;
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5 | ; Given an input of files, check the fields in the files
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6 | ; for conformance to the SAC field numbering conventions.
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7 | ;
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8 | ; Can also print conventions.
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9 | ;
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10 | Q ; F = File
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11 | ; H = Header
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12 | ; I = Field
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13 | ; N = Node
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14 | ; P = Piece
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15 | ;
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16 | W !,"FileMan Field Numbering Conventions",!
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17 | D FNC,^XBDSET
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18 | Q:'$D(^UTILITY("XBDSET",$J))
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19 | NEW F
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20 | S F=0
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21 | F S F=$O(^UTILITY("XBDSET",$J,F)) Q:'F D FILE(F)
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22 | Q
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23 | ;
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24 | FILE(F) ;
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25 | NEW I,H,N,P
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26 | S I=0
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27 | F S I=$O(^DD(F,I)) Q:'I I '($P(^(I,0),U,2)["C") D
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28 | . S H=0
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29 | . I +$P(^DD(F,I,0),U,2) D Q
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30 | .. I $L(I)'=4 D ERR(1)
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31 | .. D FILE(+$P(^DD(F,I,0),U,2))
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32 | ..Q
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33 | . S N=$P($P(^DD(F,I,0),U,4),";",1),P=$P($P(^(0),U,4),";",2)
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34 | . I N=0 D Q
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35 | .. I $E(I)'="." D ERR(2)
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36 | .. I P'=+$P(I,".",2)!(+$P(I,".")) D ERR(3)
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37 | .. I P=10 D ERR(4)
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38 | ..Q
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39 | . I $E(I)="." D ERR(5)
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40 | . I +N,N'=+$E(I,1,$L(N)) D ERR(6)
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41 | . I +N,P'=+$E(I,$L(N)+1,99) D ERR(7)
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42 | . I 'N,P'=I D ERR(8)
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43 | .Q
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44 | Q
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45 | ;
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46 | ERR(E) ;
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47 | W:'H !," ",F," (",$O(^DD(F,0,"NM","")),"), ",I," (",$P(^DD(F,I,0),U,1),"), global location ",$P(^(0),U,4),$S(+P:"",1:"(Multiple)")
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48 | S H=1
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49 | W !?5,$P($T(@E),";",3),"."
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50 | Q
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51 | ;
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52 | 1 ;;Field number of multiple field is not 4 digits
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53 | 2 ;;Field number in 0th node should begin with '.'
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54 | 3 ;;Piece number in 0th node should = +$P(fld#,".",2)
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55 | 4 ;;Piece 10 of 0th node should be null
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56 | 5 ;;Field begins with '.' and not in 0th node
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57 | 6 ;;Field number does not begin with node location
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58 | 7 ;;Piece number does not match non-nodal part of field number
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59 | 8 ;;Field number and piece number do not match
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60 | ;
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61 | FNC ;
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62 | Q:'$$DIR^XBDIR("Y","Print conventions","N")
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63 | D ^%ZIS
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64 | Q:POP
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65 | U IO
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66 | D HELP^XBHELP("TXT","XBFNC",0),^%ZISC
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67 | Q
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68 | ;
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69 | TXT ;
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70 | ;;
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71 | ;; -------------------------------
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72 | ;; DATA DICTIONARY FIELD NUMBERING
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73 | ;; AND DATA PLACEMENT CONVENTIONS
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74 | ;; -------------------------------
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75 | ;;
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76 | ;;The following conventions for numbering fields, and placing data in pieces, is
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77 | ;;extracted from a mail message dated 25 Feb 88, and is considered to be those
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78 | ;;conventions referred to in the Programming Standards And Conventions paragraph
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79 | ;;which states "Field numbers for FileMan files will be assigned in accordance
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80 | ;;with established conventions."
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81 | ;;
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82 | ;; = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
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83 | ;;
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84 | ;;1) There is a direct correlation between the field number and the node and
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85 | ;;piece, and for multiples, between the field number and the sub-file number.
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86 | ;;
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87 | ;;2) Fields beginning with a "." are all .01-.n and are in the 0th node. Where
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88 | ;;possible, files only have a 0th node. This reduces the number of disc accesses
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89 | ;;required. A field number must be canonic, therefore, there is no .10 field.
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90 | ;;It goes from .09 to .11. That means piece 10 will always be NULL.
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91 | ;;
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92 | ;;3) Where the entire entry cannot be put in one node, there are more nodes,
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93 | ;;generally grouped by logically related fields into field numbers within some
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94 | ;;range, say 1101-1116. These would be node 11 piece 1-16, and in this case
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95 | ;;piece 10 is allowed because it is canonic.
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96 | ;;
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97 | ;;4) Multiple fields are always 4 digits. The first two digits are the next
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98 | ;;higher group, using the example above, 11 would be the next higher group. The
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99 | ;;second two digits are always 00. The subscript for that multiple is always the
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100 | ;;first two digits of the multi-valued field number. 11 in this case. The
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101 | ;;sub-file number is always the parent file number with the first two digits of
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102 | ;;the multi-valued field number appended. If we were in file 9000001 in the
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103 | ;;above example, the sub-file for field 1100 would be 9000001.11, and the
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104 | ;;subscript would be 11. Now, if we added a multiple to that sub-file, as say
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105 | ;;field number 1500, its sub-file would be 9000001.1115 and its subscript would
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106 | ;;be 15. In the data global it would look like ^AUPNPAT(DA(1),11,DA,15,0). The
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107 | ;;assigning of sub-file numbers is important, because if you let FileMan do it,
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108 | ;;he will assign numbers that may fall within the number space of primary files
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109 | ;;using our file number assigning logic.
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110 | ;;
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111 | ;;5) There are special cases that do not follow the rules, of course. On most
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112 | ;;of the pointed to files, we have added a field number 9901 MNEMONIC which is
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113 | ;;used on a site by site basis if you have a very high percentage of your lookups
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114 | ;;to two or three entries, you can add data to the MNEMONIC field, say 1, 2, and
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115 | ;;3, and instead of responding CLAREMORE to a LOCATION lookup, you can respond 1.
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116 | ;;This field is in node 88 piece 1. It is 8801 so the MNEMONIC field would be
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117 | ;;the same number in all dictionaries, regardless of how many fields, and field
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118 | ;;numbers, a particular file had already.
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119 | ;;
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120 | ;;6) Computed fields, where ever possible, immediately follow the field from
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121 | ;;which they are computed, and the computed field number is the same as the real
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122 | ;;field followed by a 9. If the field above was .12 the computed field would be
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123 | ;;.129. If you wanted more than one computed field off of .12 they would be
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124 | ;;.1291 and .1292.
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125 | ;;
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126 | ;;7) There is another class of computed field. That is a computed field that
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127 | ;;points back to the VA PATIENT file. Those fields have a .2 following the field
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128 | ;;number. That indicates it is not really a computed field, but just a pointer
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129 | ;;back to the VA PATIENT file.
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130 | ;;
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131 | ;;********************************************
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