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IBM Domino Designer
  • IBM Domino Designer Basic User Guide and Reference
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  2. IBM Domino Designer Basic User Guide and Reference

    Basic product usage information and programming language reference information.

  3. LotusScript® Language

    Welcome to the LotusScript® Language section of Domino® Designer Help.

  4. Procedures: Functions, Subs, and Properties
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  • IBM Domino Designer Basic User Guide and Reference

    Basic product usage information and programming language reference information.

    • Application Design

      Welcome to the Application Design section of Domino® Designer Help.

    • Domino® Designer templates

      The templates described in the following table are available with Domino® Designer and are specifically intended for use by application developers.

    • Importing to and exporting from views
    • Developing applications using MAPI

      Domino® Designer Release 6 and later supports the messaging application program interface (MAPI), which allows mail integration between Domino and a MAPI-compliant messaging application, such as Microsoft™ Outlook, Microsoft Office applications, or user-written C++ programs.

    • Features to avoid using in Web applications

      Developers creating applications specifically for the Web, or for the dual purpose of serving Notes® and Web clients, should review the following tables for features that are not supported on the Web.

    • URL commands for Web applications

      You have a variety of options for programming a Web site. You can directly manipulate objects such as documents or views in an application using Domino® URL commands. Adding Domino URL commands as HTML in forms gives users shortcuts for navigating databases and performing other tasks quickly.

    • Application Management

      Welcome to the Application Management section of Domino® Designer Help.

    • Composite Applications - Design and Management

      Composite applications are a key element in a service-oriented architecture (SOA) and contextual collaboration strategy. The ability to create and edit composite applications lets you easily integrate different types of components and technologies.

    • DB2® Access views

      Domino® Designer includes two types of design elements to assist you in managing data contained in DB2® enabled Notes® databases:

    • Programming Overview and User Interface

      This section contains general guidelines and examples that show where to use Java, LotusScript, and the formula language.

    • Formula Language

      This section documents the formula language.

    • LotusScript® Language

      Welcome to the LotusScript® Language section of Domino® Designer Help.

      • Introduction to LotusScript®

        This chapter introduces LotusScript® and describes, in general terms, how to use the script editor to write and modify scripts, how to compile scripts, and how to use the debugger to locate problems in the logic of your applications.

      • Script and Statement Construction Rules

        This chapter describes the rules for writing the basic elements of a script in the LotusScript® language.

      • Data Types, Constants, and Variables

        This chapter provides information about LotusScript® constants and variables and the data types of the values that they can represent.

      • Expressions and Operators

        This chapter describes the set of LotusScript® operators, how they may be combined with operands to form expressions, and how those expressions are evaluated.

      • Procedures: Functions, Subs, and Properties
        • Procedures

          Procedures are named sections of a script that you can invoke by name. A procedure in LotusScript® takes the form of a function, a sub, or a property. Procedures are primarily ways to organize your code to make it easier to understand and maintain.

        • Functions

          A function is a named procedure that returns a single value. LotusScript® provides a set of built-in functions that you can use to perform a variety of common numeric, date/time, string, data-conversion, and value-testing operations.

        • Subs

          A sub is a named procedure that performs one or more operations without returning a value to its caller. You define a sub by specifying a series of one or more statements that are to be executed as a block and enclose these statements between the sub signature and the End Sub statement. You can't include a statement that assigns the sub a value.

        • Properties

          A property is a language element whose main purpose is to allow the indirect manipulation of variables that you don't want to expose to the application as a whole. This is especially useful in object-oriented programming. To the application, a property looks like a variable to which you can assign and from which you can retrieve a value, but it is actually more than that.

      • File Handling

        This chapter describes file handling in the LotusScript® language.

      • Error Processing

        This chapter describes error processing in the LotusScript® language.

      • User-Defined Data Types and Classes

        This chapter describes two kinds of custom data structures that you can define in LotusScript®. Each can hold data of different types in a single data structure.

      • Managing Flow in Scripts

        The flow of execution of a script generally follows the sequence of statements in the script. This chapter describes the behavior of particular statements that alter the flow of execution.

      • Managing Asynchronous Web Agents in Domino®

        This chapter describes how to use multiple threads and synchronization to manage HTTP agents with Domino®.

      • Beyond Core LotusScript®

        This chapter discusses the role that LotusScript® plays with IBM® products, your operating environment, other programs, and interactive user applications.

      • LotusScript® Language Reference

        This chapter describes the use of statements, built-in functions, subs, data types, and directives in the LotusScript® language.

      • Language and Script Limits

        This appendix describes LotusScript® language limits of several kinds: for example, the legal ranges in data representation, the limits on numerical specifications within statements, and the maximum number of different kinds of elements that can be defined in a script.

      • Platform Differences

        The LotusScript® language and functionality on the UNIX™ platform, the Macintosh platform, and the OS/400® platform differ in various ways from the language and functionality described in the rest of this language reference. This appendix describes the differences.

      • LotusScript/REXX Integration

        This appendix provides an overview of REXX integration in the LotusScript® language.

      • LotusScript® Aliases

        This appendix lists the LotusScript® aliases and their equivalent text.

      • MIME Charset Names
      • Compile-time Error Messages

        This chapter describes the compile-time error messages in the LotusScript® language.

      • Run-time Error Messages

        This chapter describes the run-time error messages in the LotusScript® language.

    • LotusScript/COM/OLE Classes
    • Java/CORBA Classes

      This section documents the Java/CORBA classes.

    • Lotus® Connectors

      Lotus® Connectors provide native access to a wide variety of DBMS products, ODBC, the platform File system, Enterprise Resource Planning systems, and Transaction Processing systems.

    • Javadoc™ for Domino® Designer related APIs

      As part of providing additional Java™ reference documentation, Domino® Designer ships with a help plugin that contains Javadoc™ for additional Domino Designer related APIs.

    • Accessibility and keyboard shortcuts

      Accessibility features assist users who have a disability, such as restricted mobility or limited vision, to use information technology content successfully.

Procedures: Functions, Subs, and Properties

You can create functions, subs, and properties in two areas of an application: at module level and as part of the definition of a user-defined class. This chapter describes the former, while "User-defined Data Types and Classes" describes the latter.

Procedures

Functions

Subs

Properties

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