| |||||||||
REXX (Restructured Extended Executor) is a programming language which was developed at IBM. It is a structured high-level programming language which was designed to be both easy to learn and easy to read. Both commercial and open source Interpreters for REXX are available on a wide range of computing platforms, and compilers are available for IBM mainframes.
REXX has the following characteristics and features:
REXX has just twenty-three, largely self-evident, instructions (e.g., call, parse, and select) with minimal punctuation and formatting requirements. It is essentially a free-form language with only one data-type, the character string; this philosophy means that all data are visible (symbolic) and debugging and tracing are simplified.
REXX syntax looks similar to PL/I, but has fewer notations; this makes it harder to parse (by program) but easier to use.
REXX was designed and first implemented as an ‘own-time’ project between 20 March 1979 and mid-1982 by Mike Cowlishaw of IBM, originally as a scripting programming language to replace the languages EXEC and EXEC 2. It was designed to be a macro or scripting language for any system. As such, REXX is considered a precursor to Tcl and Python.
It was first described in public at the SHARE 56 conference in Houston, Texas, in 1981, where customer reaction, championed by Ted Johnston of SLAC, led to it being shipped as an IBM product in 1982.
Over the years IBM included REXX in almost all of its operating systems (VM/CMS, VM/GCS, MVS TSO/E, AS/400, OS/2, VSE/ESA, AIX, CICS/ESA, and PC-DOS), and has made versions available for Novell Netware, Windows, Java, and Linux.
The first non-IBM version was written for PC-DOS by Charles Daney in 1984/5. Other versions have also been developed for Atari, Amiga, Unix (many variants), Solaris, DEC, Windows, WinCE, PocketPC, MS-DOS, Palm OS, QNX, OS/2, Linux, BeOS, EPOC32, AtheOS, OpenVMS, OpenEdition, Macintosh, and MacOS X.
Several freeware versions are available. REXX/imc and Regina are the most widely-used open-source ports to Windows and Linux. BREXX is well-known for WinCE and PocketPC platforms.
In 1996 ANSI published a standard for REXX: ANSI X3.274–1996 “Information Technology – Programming Language REXX”. More than two dozen books on REXX have been published since 1985.
In the last decade, two newer variants of REXX have appeared:
In 1990, Cathy Dager of SLAC organized the first independent REXX symposium, which led to the forming of the REXX Language Association. Symposiums are held annually.
Rexx marked its 25th anniversary on 20 March 2004, which was celebrated at the REXX Language Association]’s 15th International REXX Symposium in Böblingen, Germany, in May 2004.
The DO control structure always begins with a DO and ends with an END.
DO UNTIL:
DO WHILE:
Stepping through a variable:
Looping forever until exiting with LEAVE:
Looping a fixed number of times
Testing conditions with IF
For single instructions, DO and END can also be omitted:
SELECT is REXX’s CASE structure
NOP indicates no instruction is to be executed.
The PARSE instruction is particularly powerful; it combines some useful string-handling functions. Its syntax is:
where origin specifies the source:
and template can be:
upper is optional; it you specify it, data will be converted to upper case.
Examples:
Using a list of variables as template
displays the following
Using a delimiter as template:
also displays the following
Using column number delimiters:
displays the following
A template can use a combination of variables, literal delimiters, and column number delimiters.
REXX is included in the base operating system of OS/2, and is also used as the macro language in many applications. Under OS/2, a REXX program begins with matched comment delimiters, /* */, to indicate to the operating system that it is a REXX program:
Instructions between quotes are passed to the OS:
In plain text, Cowlishaw seems to prefer Rexx, whereas IBM documents and the majority of the web uses REXX. The ANSI standard uses the form preferred by the standardization committee, which has small capitals for the final three letters: REXX.