Keep in mind the following when defining numeric fields:
When coding the end position in positions 47 through 51 of the output
specifications, be sure to use the external format when calculating the number
of bytes to be occupied by the output field. For example, a packed field with
5 digits is stored in 3 bytes, but when output in zoned format, it requires
5 bytes. When output in integer format, it only requires 2 bytes.
If you move a character field to a zoned numeric, the sign of the character
field is fixed to zoned positive or zoned negative. The zoned portion of the
other bytes will be forced to 'F'. However, if the digit portion of one of
the bytes in the character field does not contain a valid digit a decimal
data error will occur.
When numeric fields are written out with no editing, the sign is not printed
as a separate character; the last digit of the number will include the sign.
This can produce surprising results; for example, when -625 is written out,
the zoned decimal value is X'F6F2D5' which appears as 62N.