http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=48972
--- Comment #4 from Tobias Burnus <burnus at gcc dot gnu.org> 2011-05-12 13:37:34 UTC --- (In reply to comment #3) > Wouldn't a standard-conforming way to support Unicode file names be for > gfortran to I am admittedly a bit lost. > - Specify that the default character set is UTF-8. What do you mean by that? I know 1 byte and 4 byte character variables, but I do not see where UTF-8 fits in there. (One can place UTF-8 into character(kind=1) - and it also kind of works OK. But if one wants to use len(), string manipulation ("change 3 character to ..."), or tabulated I/O that will fail. But as quirky workaround, one can use UTF-8 file names with kind=1 character variables - at least under Unix/Linux.) Regarding the ENCODING= specifier: That's already used for the encoding of the file content - one shan't use it to also modify the interpretation of the FILE string. I still think that the default character encoding should remain 1 byte (kind=1), which is simply passed as is to "open()". And UCS-4 as FILE= argument should simply be supported as vendor extension. One just needs to tell the library that the string is in UCS-4. This wide string could then directly used for Windows' _wopen or converted to UTF-8 for Unix/Linux. (The conversion routine exists for UCS-4 <-> UTF-8 I/O.)