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I'd give that a try at least.
I'll try that, however once this test failed it gave me the option to update the checkpoint. After updating the checkpoint it passes. But when I try to store that value in our Source Control (Git), it tells me there is no difference in the checkpoint, thus not allowing me to stre the updated checkpoint.
If that is the case, then theoretically even truncation using SQL shouldn't produce a different result.
But I'll try it.
- Marsha_R8 years agoChampion Level 3
I've seen that happen with checkpoints before. Even though it looks like both of your values are the same type, the actual value may be coming across as something different. Try forcing your actual value into the same type as your accepted value using aqConvert inside the checkpoint and see if that helps.
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