Indicates the end of a block started with a CASE, CATCH, CLASS, CONSTRUCTOR, DESTRUCTOR,
DO, ENUM, FINALLY, FOR, FUNCTION, INTERFACE, METHOD, PROCEDURE, or REPEAT statement or the
end of an EDITING phrase, Trigger phrase, or the implementation of a GET or SET property
accessor.
Syntax
END [ CASE | CATCH | CLASS | CONSTRUCTOR | DESTRUCTOR | ENUM |
FINALLY | FUNCTION | GET | INTERFACE | METHOD |
PROCEDURE | SET | TRIGGERS ]
|
- [ CASE | CATCH | CLASS | CONSTRUCTOR | DESTRUCTOR | ENUM | FINALLY | FUNCTION | GET | INTERFACE | METHOD | PROCEDURE | SET | TRIGGERS ]
- An option that can appear following any END statement that terminates
the block for a statement or phrase that is specified with the same name.
Example
This
procedure contains two blocks, each ending with the END statement:
r-end.p
FOR EACH Customer NO-LOCK:
DISPLAY Customer.CustNnum Customer.Name Customer.Phone.
FOR EACH Order OF Customer NO-LOCK:
DISPLAY Order WITH 2 COLUMNS.
END.
END.
|
Notes
- Two
blocks, the CATCH block and the FINALLY block, are called end
blocks because they must appear after the last line of executable
code and before the END statement. CATCH blocks must appear before
FINALLY blocks. See the entries for these two blocks for information
about usage.
- If you do not use any END statements in a procedure, ABL assumes that
all blocks end at the end of the procedure.
- If you use any END statements in a procedure, you must use one
END statement for every block in the procedure.
See also
CASE statement, CATCH statement, CLASS statement, CONSTRUCTOR statement, DEFINE PROPERTY statement, DESTRUCTOR statement, DO statement, EDITING phrase, ENUM statement,FINALLY statement, FOR statement, FUNCTION statement, INTERFACE statement, METHOD statement, PROCEDURE statement, REPEAT statement, Trigger phrase