The DECLARE command is valid only within a command procedure.
The DECLARE command binds one or more actual parameters,
specified on the command line following the execute procedure
(@) command, to formal parameters (symbols) declared within a
command procedure.
Each p-name:p-kind pair specified by a DECLARE command binds one
formal parameter to one actual parameter. Formal parameters are
bound to actual parameters in the order in which the debugger
processes the parameter declarations. If you specify several
formal parameters on a single DECLARE command, the leftmost
formal parameter is bound to the first actual parameter, the
next formal parameter is bound to the second, and so on. If you
use a DECLARE command in a loop, the formal parameter is bound
to the first actual parameter on the first iteration of the loop;
the same formal parameter is bound to the second actual parameter
on the next iteration, and so on.
Each parameter declaration acts like a DEFINE command: it
associates a formal parameter with an address expression, a
command, or a value expression in the current language, according
to the parameter kind specified. The formal parameters themselves
are consistent with those accepted by the DEFINE command and can
in fact be deleted from the symbol table with the DELETE command.
The %PARCNT built-in symbol, which can be used only within a
command procedure, enables you to pass a variable number of
parameters to a command procedure. The value of %PARCNT is the
number of actual parameters passed to the command procedure.
Related commands:
@ (Execute Procedure)
DEFINE
DELETE