Reads a value from SYS$COMMAND (usually the terminal in
interactive mode or the next line in the main command procedure)
and assigns it to a symbol.
Format
INQUIRE symbol-name [prompt-string]
2 Parameters
symbol-name
Specifies a symbol consisting of 1 to 255 alphanumeric
characters.
prompt-string
Specifies the prompt to be displayed at the terminal when the
INQUIRE command is executed. String values are automatically
converted to uppercase. Also, any leading and trailing spaces and
tabs are removed, and multiple spaces and tabs between characters
are compressed to a single space.
Enclose the prompt in quotation marks (" ") if it contains
lowercase characters, punctuation, multiple blanks or tabs, or
an at sign (@). To denote an actual quotation mark in a prompt-
string, enclose the entire string in quotation marks and use
quotation marks (" ") within the string.
When the system displays the prompt string at the terminal,
it generally places a colon (:) and a space at the end of the
string. (See the /PUNCTUATION qualifier.)
If you do not specify a prompt string, the command interpreter
uses the symbol name to prompt for a value.
2 Qualifiers
/GLOBAL
Specifies that the symbol be placed in the global symbol table.
If you do not specify the /GLOBAL qualifier, the symbol is placed
in the local symbol table.
/LOCAL
/LOCAL (default)
Specifies that the symbol be placed in the local symbol table for
the current command procedure.
/PUNCTUATION
/PUNCTUATION (default)
/NOPUNCTUATION
Inserts a colon and a space after the prompt when it is displayed
on the terminal. To suppress the colon and space, specify the
/NOPUNCTUATION qualifier.
2 Examples
1.$ INQUIRE CHECK "Enter Y[ES] to continue"
$ IF .NOT. CHECK THEN EXIT
The INQUIRE command displays the following prompting message at
the terminal:
Enter Y[ES] to continue:
The INQUIRE command prompts for a value, which is assigned
to the symbol CHECK. The IF command tests the value assigned
to the symbol CHECK. If the value assigned to CHECK is true
(that is, an odd numeric value, a character string that begins
with a T, t, Y, or y, or an odd numeric character string), the
procedure continues executing.
If the value assigned to CHECK is false (that is, an even
numeric value, a character string that begins with any letter
except T, t, Y, or y, or an even numeric character string), the
procedure exits.
2.$ INQUIRE COUNT
$ IF COUNT .GT. 10 THEN GOTO SKIP
.
.
.
$ SKIP:
The INQUIRE command prompts for a count with the following
message:
COUNT:
Then the command procedure uses the value of the symbol COUNT
to determine whether to execute the next sequence of commands
or to transfer control to the line labeled SKIP.
3.$ IF P1 .EQS. "" THEN INQUIRE P1 "FILE NAME"
$ FORTRAN 'P1'
The IF command checks whether a parameter was passed to the
command procedure by checking if the symbol P1 is null; if
it is, it means that no parameter was specified, and the
INQUIRE command is issued to prompt for the parameter. If P1
was specified, the INQUIRE command is not executed, and the
FORTRAN command compiles the name of the file specified as a
parameter.
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