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5.8 BOZ literal constants

As an extension, GNU Fortran allows hexadecimal BOZ literal constants to be specified using the X prefix, in addition to the standard Z prefix. BOZ literal constants can also be specified by adding a suffix to the string. For example, Z'ABC' and 'ABC'Z are equivalent.

The Fortran standard restricts the appearance of a BOZ literal constant to the DATA statement, and it is expected to be assigned to an INTEGER variable. GNU Fortran permits a BOZ literal to appear in any initialization expression as well as assignment statements.

Attempts to use a BOZ literal constant to do a bitwise initialization of a variable can lead to confusion. A BOZ literal constant is converted to an INTEGER value with the kind type with the largest decimal representation, and this value is then converted numerically to the type and kind of the variable in question. Thus, one should not expect a bitwise copy of the BOZ literal constant to be assigned to a REAL variable.

Similarly, initializing an INTEGER variable with a statement such as DATA i/Z'FFFFFFFF'/ will produce an integer overflow rather than the desired result of -1 when i is a 32-bit integer on a system that supports 64-bit integers. The `-fno-range-check' option can be used as a workaround for legacy code that initializes integers in this manner.