LDDP has a dedicated button for doing that.
You can select 1 or more lines in a file and then hit that button.
What will happen then is that the line 1 referencing another file
will be used to apply to the whole contents of the referenced file,
and the resulting computation results will be put directly into the parent file.
*Example:*
before inlining:
file x.dat references file s\somefile.dat by line 1 16 x y z a b c d e f g h i s\somefile.dat
after inlining:
file x.dat will directly contain the lines that previously were found in s\somefile.dat, with the numbers x,y,z,a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i applied to it
You can select 1 or more lines in a file and then hit that button.
What will happen then is that the line 1 referencing another file
will be used to apply to the whole contents of the referenced file,
and the resulting computation results will be put directly into the parent file.
*Example:*
before inlining:
file x.dat references file s\somefile.dat by line 1 16 x y z a b c d e f g h i s\somefile.dat
after inlining:
file x.dat will directly contain the lines that previously were found in s\somefile.dat, with the numbers x,y,z,a,b,c,d,e,f,g,h,i applied to it