It's Friday, so how about an off-the-wall question I have always wondered about.

I think the answer to my question is "no", but I thought it worth asking anyway.

Standard system storage dumps (SYSUDUMP, SNAP/SNAPX, etc.) format storage 
displays like this in a 121-character line:

36B219C0 00000000 00000000 00000000 00000000    00000000 00000000 00000000 
00000000   *................................*

Obviously there are many ways to produce such a line in your language of 
choice, but is there any available interface to the system routines that 
display storage in this format?  Not the I/O to print them or send them to a 
file, just the "storage dump formatting into a print line" part.

I am of course assuming that the storage formatting routine has been rendered 
in some common-code subroutine used by all (or some of) the "dumping" routines, 
which may or may not be a fact.

TIA for your answer even it (as I strongly suspect) the answer is "no".

Peter
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