Well, that is indeed something completely different.My main frame of
reference (pun not intentional) of that era was our IBM mini, I am not
quite sure of the type number, 3270? It had a very specific record
structure for unformatted files. Normally that was almost completely
hidden, except in the job control, but when we started exchanging data
files with the personal computers that were then coming out, I could write
programs that did the necessary conversions. Jolly good fun. My department
did not use VAXes, other departments did.

So, in your case these files contain data identifiable via some index. Hm,
today you would do that via some library instead of via some builtin
language feature, at least when using Fortran, C, C++, ...

Regards,

Arjen

Op wo 8 mrt 2023 om 14:31 schreef Roland Hughes via Fortran <
fortran@gcc.gnu.org>:

> Thank you!
>
>
> On 3/8/2023 1:57 AM, Bernhard Reutner-Fischer wrote:
> > On 7 March 2023 23:18:58 CET, Roland Hughes via Fortran <
> fortran@gcc.gnu.org> wrote:
> >
> > [ snip namelist IO ]
> >
> >> Btw, is there a "search" utility for the archives or do I have to pull
> down all of the zip files, unzip into directory, and grep to look for stuff
> like this? I'm guessing it has come up before.
> > Indeed we have
> > https://inbox.sourceware.org/fortran/
> >
> > along the traditional pipermail ml interface.
> >
> > thanks,
>
> --
> Roland Hughes, President
> Logikal Solutions
> (630)-205-1593  (cell)
> http://www.theminimumyouneedtoknow.com
> http://www.infiniteexposure.net
> http://www.johnsmith-book.com
>
>

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