LGT
— Lexical greater than ¶Determines whether one string is lexically greater than another string, where the two strings are interpreted as containing ASCII character codes. If the String A and String B are not the same length, the shorter is compared as if spaces were appended to it to form a value that has the same length as the longer.
In general, the lexical comparison intrinsics LGE
, LGT
,
LLE
, and LLT
differ from the corresponding intrinsic
operators .GE.
, .GT.
, .LE.
, and .LT.
, in
that the latter use the processor’s character ordering (which is not
ASCII on some targets), whereas the former always use the ASCII
ordering.
Fortran 77 and later
Elemental function
RESULT = LGT(STRING_A, STRING_B)
STRING_A | Shall be of default CHARACTER type. |
STRING_B | Shall be of default CHARACTER type. |
Returns .TRUE.
if STRING_A > STRING_B
, and .FALSE.
otherwise, based on the ASCII ordering.
Name | Argument | Return type | Standard |
---|---|---|---|
LGT(STRING_A,STRING_B) | CHARACTER | LOGICAL | Fortran 77 and later |
LGE
— Lexical greater than or equal,
LLE
— Lexical less than or equal,
LLT
— Lexical less than