-# $Id: ZOOM.pod,v 1.43 2007-05-09 12:03:52 mike Exp $
-
use strict;
use warnings;
irrespective of whether it is a member of the C<ZOOM::Error>
enumeration or drawn from the BIB-1 diagnostic set.
+=head2 ZOOM::diag_srw_str()
+
+ $msg = ZOOM::diag_srw_str(18);
+
+Returns a human-readable English-language string corresponding to the
+specified SRW error code.
+
=head2 ZOOM::event_str()
$msg = ZOOM::event_str(ZOOM::Event::RECV_APDU);
The C<record()> method returns a C<ZOOM::Record> object representing
a record from result-set, whose position is indicated by the argument
passed in. This is a zero-based index, so that legitimate values
-range from zero to C<$rs->size()-1>.
+range from zero to C<$rs-E<gt>size()-1>.
The C<record_immediate()> API is identical, but it never invokes a
network operation, merely returning the record from the ResultSet's
strategy might be always to ask for blocks of a twenty records:
that's great for assembling long lists of things, but wasteful when
only one record is wanted. The problem is that the ZOOM module can't
-tell, when you call C<$rs->record()>, what your intention is.
+tell, when you call C<$rs-E<gt>record()>, what your intention is.
But you can tell it. The C<records()> method fetches a sequence of
records, all in one go. It takes three arguments: the first is the