Errant is correct. It has two meanings as an adjective:
1. erring or straying from the proper course or standards. "he could never forgive his daughter's errant ways" synonyms: offending, guilty, culpable, misbehaving, delinquent, lawbreaking
2. archaic/literary: traveling in search of adventure. "that same lady errant," "a knight errant" synonyms: traveling, wandering, itinerant, roaming, roving, voyaging
Mike
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-----Original Message----- From: ProfoxTech [mailto:profoxtech-bounces@leafe.com] On Behalf Of Laurie Alvey Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2017 11:32 AM To: profoxtech@leafe.com Subject: Re: "An IF | ELSE | ENDIF statement is missing"
Apart from all of the above, my pet hate is mistakenly using ERRANT instead of ERRING. ERRING means in error and ERRANT means on a mission (as in "A Knight Errant"). I'm sure as children we all had to run ERRANDS (same root).
Laurie
On 13 July 2017 at 16:00, Paul H. Tarver paul@tpcqpc.com wrote:
Sometimes, the Beautify command can help with this. The indenting helps me find where I'm off track or at least isolate the general area where the problem starts.
Paul H. Tarver Tarver Program Consultants, Inc. Email: paul@tpcqpc.com
-----Original Message----- From: ProfoxTech [mailto:profoxtech-bounces@leafe.com] On Behalf Of mbsoftwaresolutions@mbsoftwaresolutions.com Sent: Thursday, July 13, 2017 8:41 AM To: profoxtech@leafe.com Subject: "An IF | ELSE | ENDIF statement is missing"
Don't you hate it when you have a super long one-time conversion program, add some new 1-time crap over time, and then all of the sudden when ready to run you get this error message, AND CAN'T SEE WHERE THIS MISSING/ERRANT STRUCTURE IS?
I'd be surprised if we haven't all been there at some point in our dev lives.
It pays to take the time and do good modular design instead of this way-too-long PRG run on crap. hahaha
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