Intel® Fortran Compiler 18.0 Developer Guide and Reference
The DECIMAL specifier controls the representation of the decimal symbol for a connection. It takes the following form:
DECIMAL = dmode
dmode |
Is a scalar default character expression that evaluates to one of the following values:
|
The default decimal editing mode is 'POINT'.
You can only use this specifier for a formatted I/O connection.
When the mode is DECIMAL='POINT', the decimal point in a numeric input or output value is a period, values are separated by commas in list-directed and NAMELIST I/O, and the separator between the real and imaginary parts of a complex value is a comma.
When the mode is DECIMAL='COMMA', the decimal point in a numeric input or output value is a comma, values are separated by semicolons in list-directed and NAMELIST I/O, and the separator between the real and imaginary parts of a complex value is a semicolon.
The decimal editing mode can be temporarily changed within a READ or WRITE statement by the DECIMAL= specifier or by the corresponding DC and DP edit descriptors.