Intel® Fortran Compiler 17.0 Developer Guide and Reference
Intel Fortran also supports internal files and scratch files.
When you use sequential access, you can use an internal file to reference character data in a buffer. The transfer occurs between internal storage spaces (unlike external files), such as between user variables and a character array.
An internal file consists of any of the following:
Character variable
Character-array element
Character array
Character substring
Character array section without a vector subscript
Instead of specifying a unit number for the READ or WRITE statement, use an internal file specifier in the form of a character scalar memory reference or a character-array name reference.
An internal file is a designated internal storage space (variable buffer) of characters that is treated as a sequential file of fixed-length records. To perform internal I/O, use formatted and list-directed sequential READ and WRITE statements. You cannot use file-related statements such as OPEN and INQUIRE on an internal file (no unit number is used).
If an internal file is made up of a single character variable, array element, or substring, that file comprises a single record whose length is the same as the length of the character variable, array element, or substring it contains. If an internal file is made up of a character array, that file comprises a sequence of records, with each record consisting of a single array element. The sequence of records in an internal file is determined by the order of subscript progression.
A record in an internal file can be read only if the character variable, array element, or substring comprising the record has been defined (a value has been assigned to the record).
Prior to each READ and WRITE statement, an internal file is always positioned at the beginning of the first record.
Scratch files are created by specifying STATUS= 'SCRATCH' in an OPEN statement. By default, these temporary files are created by an OPEN statement and are deleted when closed.