>>Hi,
>>
>>As I go through my program, I see many places where I convert a string to date, using CTOD(), hard-coded with MM/DD/YYYY. But if the date is (for example), British ("DD/MM/YYYY") it won't work.
>>
>>How do you suggest I change all places that use CTOD() from hard-coded use of American date system to another?
>>
>>TIA
>
>If I had to do this task, I would write a program to scan through every PRG, VCX, SCX, FRX, wherever there was code, and identify all of the expressions with CTOD() and replace them with my_ctod(), and then add FUNCTION my_ctod to my utility.prg or main.prg, whatever is in the SET PROCEDURE TO path.
>
>The my_ctod() function would take the incoming form in the MM/DD/YYYY and you could translate it on-the-fly and return the value. Something like this (untested, off the top of my head):
>
>
>FUNCTION my_ctod
>LPARAMETERS tcDate
>LOCAL lnMm, lnDd, lnYyyy
>
> lnMm = INT(VAL(GETWORDNUM(tcDate, 1, "/")))
> lnDd = INT(VAL(GETWORDNUM(tcDate, 2, "/")))
> lnYyyy = INT(VAL(GETWORDNUM(tcDate, 3, "/")))
>
> * Compute date in a standard form
> RETURN DATE(lnYyyy + IIF(lnYyyy < 100, INT(YEAR(DATE()) / 1000) * 1000, 0), lnMm, lnDd)
>
>Something like that.
Instead of adding this function to a procedure file, I would create a separate file and call it my_ctod.prg. I have stopped using procedure files many years ago, much easier with separate files.