GetV – XpressDox
GetV gets the value of an XpressDox variable. Reference material: Please read through this article to understand the difference between data elements and variables. And this article for an overview of working with variables
Tutorial videos are available here.
Visit our User Forum for discussions and solutions
GetV gets the value of an XpressDox variable. Reference material: Please read through this article to understand the difference between data elements and variables. And this article for an overview of working with variables
GetVn gets the value of an XpressDox variable where the value is known to be numeric Reference material: Please read through this article to understand the difference between data elements and variables. And this article
Prefix values to variables in your XpressDox Document Automation template The AppendVr and PrependVr functions provide less cumbersome syntax for appending or prefixing values to variables than using SetVr to do this. Without the
SetVr sets the value of an XpressDox variable, and removes the paragraph. Reference material: Please read through this article to understand the difference between data elements and variables. And this article for an overview
Here are some examples to illustrate the concept which enables the results of calculations to be stored for further use in the template, and even for future templates.
XpressDox give the template author the ability to perform calculations and other operations on the values of data elements, and to store those values in variables for later use in the template. One example of this is the ability to calculate totals on repeated data elements.
With effect from Version 7, there are a number of shortcuts for referring to some of the variable-handling functions. They were introduced to take away the amount of typing necessary when many variables are being
There are times when it is necessary to concatenate the values of data elements, variables and/or hard-coded strings together to form a value which is then stored in a variable. The concat function does this.
Using standard XpressDox functions and commands, XpressDox renders a date in archaic form, i.e. 2009-09-02 becomes “the 2nd day of October in the Year of Our Lord Two Thousand and Nine”.
Copyright ©2023 XpressDox. All Rights Reserved. | Website By Hello Fascination