Special characters
special_characters
The following characters have a special meaning for Inclan. To use them literally, they usually must be preceded by a backslash.
$ "$variable" substitutes the value of the variable in the command
line. Substitutions proceed from left to right. If the value of
the variable or function call starts and ends with single quotes
(i.e. if it is a Fortran-77 character string), the delimiting
single quotes are removed before inserting the value.
% "%variable" substitutes the value of the variable in the command
line. Substitutions proceed from left to right. Single quotes that
delimit Fortran-77 character strings are retained.
{ } The curly braces in "{$variable}" or "{%variable}" separate the
variable name variable from immediately following text.
"${expression}" or "%{expression}" substitute the result value
of the FORTRAN-77 expression.
( ) "$variable(format)" uses the given FORTRAN-77 format to convert
the numeric value of a variable into the string that is substituted
in the command line. If the value of the variable is a comma-separated
list, "$variable(n)", where n is an integer expression, substitutes
with the n-th element of this list. "$variable(m:n)", where m and n
are integer expressions, substitutes with the substring between
positions m and n of the value of the variable. These three possible
uses of parentheses cannot be used simultaneously.
- separates commands that stand on the same line. Note, however, that
commands that form blocks (e.g. do ... end do, if ... end if) must
always appear as the first command on a line.
- "Label:" denotes a label that can be used as the target of a jump.
\ "\c" treats the character c literally and allows the use of special
characters in normal text, "\" at the end of a line indicates that
the statement continues on the following line.
" "text" treats text as a single parameter, even if it contains spaces.
Variable substitutions in the text still occur.
text treats text as a single parameter; the single quotes remain
part of the text. Single quotes are used to delimit FORTRAN-77
character string constants. Variable substitutions in the text
still occur.
- Text between a comment sign "#" and the end of the line is treated
as a comment and skipped by the program.
@ Commands preceded by "@" are only echoed if the variable echo has
the value full. "@" has its special meaning only if it occurs as
the first character of a command.
! "!string" recalls the last interactive command that started with
"string". "!" has its special meaning only if it occurs as the
first character of a command.
^ "^string^replacement^" executes the last interactive command again
after replacing the first occurrence of string by replacement. The
third caret is optional unless the replacement string has trailing
blanks. "^" has its special meaning only if it occurs as the first
character of a command.