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NEW statement
Creates an instance of a class (object) using the NEW function and assigns its object reference to an appropriately defined ABL data element. Once assigned, you can use the object reference to access this class instance and its PUBLIC data members, properties, and methods. For more information on object references, see the reference entry for a Class-based object reference:
Syntax 
 
object-reference = new-function [ NO-ERROR ]
object-reference
The name of an ABL data element to which you want to assign the object reference of a new instance of the class specified by new-function. This data element must be defined as a compatible class or interface type and can be one of the following:
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To be compatible, the object type of object-reference must be:
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new-function
An invocation of the NEW function, which creates an instance of a specified class and returns an object reference to that instance. This is the syntax for the NEW function, where object-type-name must specify a class type consistent with the object type of object-reference: The value of new-function is restricted to alphanumeric characters plus the symbols #, $, %, and _.
 
Syntax 
NEW object-type-name ( [ parameter [ , parameter ] ... ] )
The parameter list specifies the class constructor that is used to instantiate the class. For more information on the syntax and operation of the NEW function, see the NEW function (classes) reference entry.
NO-ERROR
Suppresses ABL errors or error messages that would otherwise occur and diverts them to the ERROR-STATUS system handle. If an error occurs, the action of the statement is not done and execution continues with the next statement. If the statement fails, any persistent side-effects of the statement are backed out. If the statement includes an expression that contains other executable elements, like methods, the work performed by these elements may or may not be done, depending on the order the AVM resolves the expression elements and the occurrence of the error.
For the NEW statement, after the statement completes, object-reference remains unchanged. If a RETURN statement or an UNDO statement with the THROW or RETURN ERROR options in a constructor raises ERROR and also returns an error string, you can obtain this string value after the assignment statement completes using the RETURN-VALUE function.
To check for errors after a statement that uses the NO-ERROR option:
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Check if the ERROR-STATUS:NUM-MESSAGES attribute is greater than zero to see if the AVM generated error messages. ABL handle methods used in a block without a CATCH end block treat errors as warnings and do not raise ERROR, do not set the ERROR-STATUS:ERROR attribute, but do add messages to the ERROR-STATUS system handle. Therefore, this test is the better test for code using handle methods without CATCH end blocks. ABL handle methods used in a block with a CATCH end block raise ERROR and add messages to the error object generated by the AVM. In this case, the AVM does not update the ERROR-STATUS system handle.
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Use ERROR-STATUS:GET-MESSAGE( message-num ) to retrieve a particular message, where message-num is 1 for the first message.
If the statement does not include the NO-ERROR option, you can use a CATCH end block to handle errors raised by the statement.
Some other important usage notes on the NO-ERROR option:
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Example 
The following code fragment shows the definition of a variable that is assigned to the object reference for a new class instance:
 
DEFINE VARIABLE myCustObj AS CLASS acme.myObjs.CustObj NO-UNDO.
 
myCustObj = NEW acme.myObjs.CustObj ( ). 
Notes 
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After the assignment, object-reference contains a copy of the object reference value returned by new-function, which points to the same object instance, not a copy of the object created by new-function.
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Although you can assign an object reference to a temp-table field defined as a Progress.Lang.Object class type, you cannot assign an object reference to a field in a database table. For more information, see OpenEdge Development: Object-oriented Programming.
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This statement can raise errors during the execution of constructors for the class being instantiated by new-function, or for any class in its inherited class hierarchy. For example:
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A constructor in the class hierarchy executes the RETURN statement with the ERROR option or the UNDO statement with the THROW or RETURN ERROR options.
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When the AVM encounters one of these errors, and the constructor cannot create the class instance or its inherited class hierarchy, the AVM automatically invokes the destructor for any class that has already been constructed while building the class hierarchy for the object.
For more information on errors raised by instantiating classes, see OpenEdge Development: Object-oriented Programming.
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See also 
Assignment (=) statement, CAST function, Class-based object reference, CLASS statement, DYNAMIC-NEW statement, NEW function (classes), New( ) method, Parameter passing syntax

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