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Reply from horacio zapettini on Aug 20 at 7:24 AM Vikash, These questions and the posterior thread told me one thing: you aren't using the help resources you have... Please be kind and 1. navigate help.sap.com and search there (there are tons of lines written) 2. use tcode abaphelp with start-of-selection and end-of-selection 3. GIYF! (google is your friend! use it... PLEASE!... ;) 4. and the most important one: tell your interviewers you'll adhere to all the programming best practices they have in the company. Once you're in, you may want to ask them for a copy and read them. As it's been said, both events are not mandatory, but help to delimit the code, to make it more "human readable". You can write the code as clean as you want or as complex as you want. It's up to you.... always remember that the code you write would be read and changed by someone else in the organization. if your code is hard to follow, you'll cost money to the company. If your code is clean and tidy you'll be saving money to the company. What kind of developer would you like to be? (first one or second one? Answer yourself this question and you'll learn why SoS or EoS are so important....) HTH Horacio PS: BTW, this is a question for sap-newbies. Not for an abap group.
| | | ---------------Original Message--------------- From: pathakvikash72 Sent: Wednesday, August 20, 2014 6:41 AM Subject: Why Start-of-selection is Mandatory? Hi Stefan Vermeulen, Actually I have been asked this question again and again in interviews, and as you said just for understanding purpose we use SOS and EOS so instead of this we can use comment as well. then now why we need SOS and EOS. | | Reply to this email to post your response. __.____._ | In the Spotlight Become a blogger at Toolbox.com and share your expertise with the community. Start today. _.____.__ |