Subroutines & Functions
VBScript Subroutines and Functions
This section provides an overview of using subroutines and procedures in Altum Designer VisualBasic scripts.
Passing Parameters to Procedures
When a function or subroutine (a procedure/method) that can accept parameters is defined in a script, variables can be passed to the function or subroutine in two ways: by reference or by value, using ByRef
or ByVal
respectively.
To declare the method that parameters are passed to, use the ByRef
or ByVal
keywords in the parameter list when defining the function or subroutine in a Sub
or Function
statement. For example, the following code fragment defines a subroutine that accepts two parameters. The first is passed by value and the second by reference:
Sub Test (ByVal Param1 As Integer , ByRef B As String)
The difference between the two methods is that ByRef
passes a reference to the variable and allows the subroutine/function to make changes to the actual variable that is passed in as parameters. This is the default method of passing parameters and is used if the method is not explicitly declared.
ByVal
passes the value of the variable only. The subroutine or function can use this value, but the original variable passed is not altered.
The following examples illustrate the differences between methods. The main procedure is as follows:
Sub Main
Dim X, Y
X = 45 : Y = "Number"
Test X, Y ' Call to a subprocedure called Test.
MsgBox X
MsgBox Y
End Sub
The above procedure includes a call to a subprocedure Test
— see below.
If the subroutine is defined as follows:
Sub Test (ByRef A, ByRef B)
B = B & " = " & A : A = 10*A
End Sub
Then the variables X
and Y
in the main procedure are referenced directly by the subroutine. The result is that the values of X
and Y
are altered by the subroutine, so that after Test
is executed; X = 450 and Y = "Number = 45". This is the default behavior when the method is not explicitly declared.
If, however, the subroutine is defined as follows:
Sub Test (ByVal A, ByVal B)
B = B & " = " & A : A = 10*A
End Sub
Then after Test
is executed the main procedure reports; X = 45 and Y = "Number" — that is, they remain unchanged.
Alternatively, if the subroutine is defined as follows(mixed methods):
Sub Test (ByRef A, ByVal B)
B = B & " = " & A : A = 10*A
End Sub
Then after Test
is executed, X = 450 and Y = "Number", since Y
was passed by value, it remains unchanged.
You can override the ByRef
setting of a function or subroutine by putting parentheses around a variable name in the calling statement.
Calling Test with the following statement:
Test (X), Y
...would pass the variable X
by value, regardless of the method defined for that parameter in the procedure definition.
Date and Time Routines
The VBScript language supports a set of Date/Time routines as outlined below:
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File IO Routines
The VBScript language supports the following set of File IO routines:
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Math Routines
The VBScript language supports the following set of Math routines:
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String Routines
The VBScript language supports a range of String routines as outlined below:
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Server Process Routines
The server process routines are used when dealing with processes in scripts, especially where there is a need to extract (get) or set strings for the process parameters.
To execute processes and parameters in scripts, use the following functions:
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Useful functions
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Useful Dialogs
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