Hollerith constant
Encyclopedia
Hollerith constants, named in honor of Herman Hollerith
Herman Hollerith
Herman Hollerith was an American statistician who developed a mechanical tabulator based on punched cards to rapidly tabulate statistics from millions of pieces of data. He was the founder of one of the companies that later merged and became IBM.-Personal life:Hollerith was born in Buffalo, New...

, were used in early FORTRAN
Fortran
Fortran is a general-purpose, procedural, imperative programming language that is especially suited to numeric computation and scientific computing...

 programs to allow manipulation of character data.

Early FORTRAN had no CHARACTER data type
Data type
In computer programming, a data type is a classification identifying one of various types of data, such as floating-point, integer, or Boolean, that determines the possible values for that type; the operations that can be done on values of that type; the meaning of the data; and the way values of...

, only numeric types. In order to perform character manipulation, characters needed to be placed into numeric variables via Hollerith constants. For example the constant 3HABC specified a three-character string 'ABC'. These constants were typeless, so that there were no type conversion
Type conversion
In computer science, type conversion, typecasting, and coercion are different ways of, implicitly or explicitly, changing an entity of one data type into another. This is done to take advantage of certain features of type hierarchies or type representations...

 issues. If the constant specified fewer characters than was possible to hold in a data item, the characters were then stored in the item left-justified and blank-filled.

Mechanics

By the FORTRAN 66 Standard, Hollerith syntax was allowed in the following uses:
  • As constants in DATA statements
  • As constant actual arguments in subroutine CALL statements
  • As edit descriptors in FORMAT statements


Portability was problematic with Hollerith constants. First, word sizes varied on different computer systems, so the number of characters that could be placed in each data item likewise varied. Implementations varied from as few as two to as many as ten characters per word. Second, it was difficult to manipulate individual characters within a word in a portable fashion. This led to a great deal of shifting and masking code using non-standard, vendor-specific, features. The fact that character sets varied between machines also complicated the issue.

Some authors were of the opinion that for best portability, only a single character should be used per data item. However considering the small memory sizes of machines of the day, this technique was considered extremely wasteful.

Technological obsolescence

One of the major features of FORTRAN 77 was the CHARACTER string data type. Use of this data type dramatically simplified character manipulation in Fortran programs - rendering almost all uses of the Hollerith constant technique obsolete.

Hollerith constants were deleted from the FORTRAN 77 Standard, though still described in an appendix for those wishing to continue support. Hollerith edit descriptors were allowed through Fortran 90, and were deleted from the Fortran 95 Standard.

Examples

The following is a FORTRAN 66 hello world program using Hollerith constants. It assumes that at least four characters per word are supported by the implementation:

C PROGRAM HELLO1
C
INTEGER IHWSTR(3)
DATA IHWSTR/4HHELL,4HO WO,3HRLD/
C
WRITE (6,100) IHWSTR
STOP
100 FORMAT (3A4)
END

Besides DATA statements, Hollerith constants were also allowed as actual arguments in subroutine calls. However there was no way that the callee could know how many characters were passed in. The programmer had to pass the information explicitly. The hello world program could be written as follows - on a machine where four characters are stored in a word:

C PROGRAM HELLO2
CALL WRTOUT (11HHELLO WORLD, 11)
STOP
END
C
SUBROUTINE WRTOUT (IARRAY, NCHRS)
C
INTEGER IARRAY(1)
INTEGER NCHRS
C
INTEGER ICPW
DATA ICPW/4/
INTEGER I, NWRDS
C
NWRDS = (NCHRS + ICPW - 1) /ICPW
WRITE (6,100) (IARRAY(I), I=1,NWRDS)
RETURN
100 FORMAT (100A4)
END



Although technically not a Hollerith constant, the same Hollerith syntax was allowed as an edit descriptor in FORMAT statements. The hello world program could also be written as:

C PROGRAM HELLO3
WRITE (6,100)
STOP
100 FORMAT (11HHELLO WORLD)
END

One of the most surprising features was the behaviour of Hollerith edit descriptors when used for input. The following program would change at run time HELLO WORLD to whatever would happen to be the next eleven characters in the input stream and print that input:

C PROGRAM WHAT1
READ (5,100)
WRITE (6,100)
STOP
100 FORMAT (11HHELLO WORLD)
END
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