Difference between revisions of "SYS$COMMAND"
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Although you can redefine SYS$COMMAND, DCL ignores your definition. DCL always uses the default definition for your initial input stream. However, if you execute an [[Image|image]] that references SYS$COMMAND, the image can use your new definition. | Although you can redefine SYS$COMMAND, DCL ignores your definition. DCL always uses the default definition for your initial input stream. However, if you execute an [[Image|image]] that references SYS$COMMAND, the image can use your new definition. | ||
− | [[Category:Logical | + | [[Category:Logical Name]] |
Latest revision as of 12:41, 29 May 2022
SYS$COMMAND is a process-permanent logical name that refers to the source of user input.
Defaults
When a user logs in interactively, SYS$COMMAND points to the terminal. When a command procedure is executed interactively, SYS$COMMAND still points to the terminal (while SYS$INPUT points to the command procedure file) so that you can accept user input when necessary. When you submit a batch job, both SYS$INPUT and SYS$COMMAND point to the command procedure file.
Although you can redefine SYS$COMMAND, DCL ignores your definition. DCL always uses the default definition for your initial input stream. However, if you execute an image that references SYS$COMMAND, the image can use your new definition.