- Industry: Computer
- Number of terms: 98482
- Number of blossaries: 0
- Company Profile:
Sometimes referred to as “Big Blue” IBM is a multinational corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York. It manufactures computer hardware and software and provides information technology and services.
A 64-bit or 128-bit representation of a number with a precision of 16 or 34 decimal digits and an exponent. Decimal floating-point numbers include normal numbers, subnormal numbers, and the special values of infinity, NaN, and sNaN. In IBM SQL, decimal floating-point numbers are not considered to be floating-point numbers. See also not-a-number, infinity, signaling NaN, subnormal number, normal number, floating-point number.
Industry:Software
A CICS program that is invoked at a particular point in CICS processing as if it were part of CICS code. You can modify the supplied program by including your own logic, or replace it with a version that you write yourself. Examples include the dynamic routing program, and the transaction restart program.
Industry:Software
A CICS program that is invoked at an exit point (other than an exit point in a domain) to handle the user exit program associated with that exit point.
Industry:Software
An indicator that is set on when the specified record cannot be found.
Industry:Software
A backup cluster that is defined statically to handle requests if the primary cluster fails.
Industry:Software
A CICS program used by terminal control to analyze terminal abnormal conditions that are logical unit or node errors detected by VTAM.
Industry:Software
A backup copy of a data set made while the data set is open for update. The backup copy can contain partial updates.
Industry:Software
A CICS program used with XRF, that runs in its own address space and provides status information about the active and alternate CICS systems. You can use it to automate a restart of failed regions.
Industry:Software
A backup copy of a database or table space plus zero or more log files that, when restored and rolled forward, bring the database or table space back to a consistent state.
Industry:Software