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Um... PL/M is not safe, and does not have "safe strings and arrays". It doesn't have strings... It has bytes and addresses.

I hope /s means "sarcastic".




I was being sarcastic, but not in relation to PL/M.

It has subscripted variables with LENGTH() to check its size (aka arrays), and an array of bytes is a string.

You can even create structures of subscripted variables.

PL/M manuals have a couple of examples with string utility functions by the way.


That is indeed what /s means


What else would /s mean?




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