C/AL Compound Statements
A compound statement is one type of control structure in C/AL.
Using Compound Statements
In some cases, the C/AL syntax only lets you use a single statement. However, if you have to execute more than one simple statement, the statements can be written as a compound statement by enclosing the statements between the BEGIN and END keywords.
BEGIN
<Statement 1>;
<Statement 2>;
..
<Statement n>;
END
The individual statements are separated by a semicolon. In C/AL, a semicolon is used to separate statements and not, as in other programming languages, as a terminator symbol for a statement. Nevertheless, an extra semicolon before an END does not cause an error because it is interpreted by the compiler as an empty statement.
Blocks
The BEGIN-END structure is also called a block. Blocks can be very useful to refer to the other control structures in C/AL.
When BEGIN follows THEN, ELSE, or DO, it should be on the same line and preceded by one space character.
Example
IF (x = y) AND (a = b) THEN BEGIN
x := a;
y := b;
END;
Example
IF (xxx = yyyyyyyyyy) AND
(aaaaaaaaaa = bbb)
THEN BEGIN
x := a;
x := y;
a := y;
END ELSE BEGIN
y := x;
y := a;
END;
See Also
C/AL Conditional Statements
C/AL Repetitive Statements
C/AL WITH Statements