Script Structure
        A script consists of 3 different types of lines:
        
        
            
                |   | Comment Lines | 
        
        
            - Each line starting with the exclamation mark character 
 "!", is a comment. These lines are not considered as processing 
 steps and skipped during script execution. 
  
            - 
                 If the exclamation mark 
 character is used within a line, however, this line is not considered 
 a comment. If the exclamation mark 
 character is used within a line, however, this line is not considered 
 a comment.
- Multi-line comments may be created by highlighting 
 the particular lines and pushing the button  in the 
 tool bar of the UserInterface. in the 
 tool bar of the UserInterface.
- 
                 We recommend making ample 
 use of comments so that you or other users may easily reproduce at a later 
 point what the script lines do. We recommend making ample 
 use of comments so that you or other users may easily reproduce at a later 
 point what the script lines do.
            
                |   | AE Script Lines | 
        
        
            - Lines starting with the colon character ":" 
 contain AE Script elements. They may be split up in script functions 
 -which supply return codes- and script statements -which do not supply 
 return codes.
            Example of a script 
 statement: :PRINT "Automation Engine"
            Example of a script 
 function: :SET &RESULT# =ADD(2,2)
        
            - The underscore character "_" may be 
 used for extra long lines to indicate that the text continues in the next 
 line. The last character of a line should therefore be an underscore. 
 The proximate line should start with a colon. 
            
                |   | Data Lines | 
        
        
            - If a line neither starts with a "!" 
 nor with a ":", it is considered a DATA line. DATA lines can 
 only be used with "Job" objects. They contain the JCL (Job Control 
 Language) of the target system. If a DATA line starts with a ":", 
 it must explicitly be declared as such with the script element :DATA.
            Example:
            copy test.txt c:\temp
            
        
            - Jobs for Enterprise Business Solutions (SAP, PeopleSoft 
 and Oracle Applications) show some special features. AE provides an extra 
 JCL for those.
- Script variables included in DATA lines are replaced 
 by their values. Script variables start with the special character "&". 
 If "&" is used in a DATA line and should remain there as 
 it is, it needs to be doubled. If "&" is used without being 
 followed by a valid variable name, the DATA line also remains unchanged.