AGING Keyword Parameters

The AGING keyword specifies that date values in the source columns are to be aged. It provides the parameters to be used in the aging process.

Note: You must specify a value for only one aging method: Explicit, Incremental, or Target. For Incremental aging, the combined values of Years, Months, Weeks, and Days cannot result in a year value greater than 3999. If the value exceeds 3999, an error occurs in processing.

The following AGING keyword parameters must be contained in parentheses and separated by spaces.

AGING( {  EXP_DATE date |
<  YEARS n | MONTHS n | WEEKS n |  DAYS n > |
 BUSINESS_UNITS n |
 BASE_DATE date TARGET_DATE date } 
[ DEF_RULE_TABLE tablename  DEF_RULE_NAME rulename ] 
[ PIVOT_YEAR nn ]  [ PROCESS_DATE_COLUMNS { A | U } ] 
[ REPORT_INVALID { YES | NO } ] [ REPORT_SKIPPED { YES | NO } ] 
[ OUTPUT_INVALID { YES | NO } ] [ OUTPUT_SKIPPED { YES | NO } ] )
Explicit Parameter
EXP_DATE
Specify an explicit date for aging. The date must be in the form YYYY/MM/DD or YYYY/DDD (a Julian date). The aging rule is applied to this date.
Incremental Parameters
YEARS
Adjust the date by n number of years.
+nnnnn | -nnnnn
Increment or decrement the value in the column by the number of years specified. Specify one to four digits in the following range: -2500 to +1581. A plus sign or a minus sign preceding the value indicates whether the date is to be incriminated or decremented. Increment is the default.
MONTHS
Adjust the date by n number of months.
+nnnnn | -nnnnn
Increment or decrement the value in the column by the number of months specified. Specify one to five digits in the following range, -30000 to +30000. A plus sign or a minus sign preceding the value indicates whether the date is to be incriminated or decremented. Increment is the default.
WEEKS
Adjust the date by n number of weeks.
+nnnnn | -nnnnn
Increment or decrement the value in the column by the number of weeks specified. Specify one to five digits in the following range, -30000 to +30000. A plus sign or a minus sign preceding the value indicates whether the date is to be incriminated or decremented. Increment is the default.
DAYS
Adjust the date by n number of days.
+nnnnn | -nnnnn
Increment or decrement the value in the column by the number of days specified. Specify one to five digits, in the following range -99999 to +99999. A plus sign or a minus sign preceding the value indicates whether the date is to be incriminated or decremented. Increment is the default.
BUSINESS_UNITS
Specify the date adjustment by business rule units.
nnnnn
Adjust the value in the column by n number of occurrences of the specified business rule unit. Specify one to five digits in the range, 0 to 30000. (Incriminating and decrementing is controlled by the rule.) For example, if the Aging rule is specified as NEXTPAYDAY, the date is adjusted by the specified number of paydays. Therefore, a 4 in BUSINESS_UNITS adjusts the date to the fourth payday after the date value in the column.
Target Parameters
BASE_DATE
Specify an explicit date as the origination or starting date for calculating the aging amount. If you omit BASE_DATE, the current date is assumed.
date
Must be in the form YYYY/MM/DD or YYYY/DDD (a Julian date).
TARGET_DATE
Specify an explicit date as the target for calculating the aging amount. The aging amount is determined by the difference between the Base Date and the Target Date.
date
Must be in the form YYYY/MM/DD or YYYY/DDD (a Julian date).
Other Parameters
DEF_RULE_TABLE
The name of the aging rule table to be used. (The default is the site default aging rule table.)
DEF_RULE_NAME
The default aging rule for any date column not explicitly assigned an aging rule. This must be a value in the default aging rule table or blank.

If DEF_RULE_NAME is blank, no aging rule is applied to any aged data that is not explicitly assigned a rule. (For details about aging rule tables, see Customize Aging Rules in the Customization Guide.)

PIVOT_YEAR
The year used to determine the century to assign to two-digit year values. For example, if the PIVOT_YEAR value is 65, all two-digit years that are 65 or greater are assumed to be in the 20th century (19xx) and all two-digit years that are less than 65 are assumed to be in the 21st century (20xx). This information is necessary to properly age the data.
Note: If the Column Map specifies a Pivot Year value for an individual column, the PIVOT_YEAR value is ignored for that column.
nn
Specify a two-digit value from 00 to 99.
PROCESS_DATE_COLS
The type of date columns to be aged. Specify:
A
Age all DATE and TIMESTAMP columns and the columns mapped to AGE.
U
Age only columns mapped to AGE.

If a Column Map is not defined or the AGE function is not specified on the selected Column Map, date values apply only to DATE and TIMESTAMP columns.

REPORT_INVALID
Indicate whether to list details of invalid dates encountered during the process in the process report. Specify:
YES
Report invalid dates.
NO
Do not report invalid dates.
REPORT_SKIPPED
Indicate whether to list details of skipped dates encountered during the process in the process report. (Dates are skipped when the value is not a valid date but has special meaning to the application. See Skipped Columns.) Specify:
YES
Report skipped dates.
NO
Do not report skipped dates.
OUTPUT_INVALID
Indicate whether rows with invalid dates are written to the destination database. Specify:
YES
Write rows with invalid dates to the database.
NO
Do not write rows with invalid dates to the database.
OUTPUT_SKIPPED
Indicate whether the rows with skipped dates are written to the database. (See Skipped Columns.) Specify:
YES
Write rows with skipped dates to the database.
NO
Do not write rows with skipped dates to the database.

Skipped Columns

Frequently, values that are not valid dates are inserted into date columns to indicate special handling or conditions. Rather than treat these non-date values as invalid or errors, the process “skips” them. That is, when a column contains such a value, the column is bypassed. Since there is no error, processing continues with the next date column.

The user can indicate whether skipped values are noted in the Aging Report and if rows with skipped dates are written to the output file.

To determine whether a column should be skipped, the process evaluates the column value.

Examples

The following statement ages a date value by one year:

AGING (YEARS 1)

The following statement ages a date value to the explicit date of January 1, 2008:

AGING (EXP_DATE 2008/01/01)