The $DISPLAY statement displays a message on the standard output device during compilation, or includes a version number in
               the object. There are two formats. 
            
            
            
               Format 1
               
               $DISPLAY text-data
                
            
            
               Format 2
               
               $DISPLAY VCS = version-number
                
            
            
               Syntax
               
               
               The entire $DISPLAY statement must appear on a single line. 
               
             
            
            
               General Rules
               
               
               
                  
                  - If a $DISPLAY statement is encountered on a source line that is ignored by conditional compilation, there is neither a compile-time
                     nor a runtime effect. 
                     
                        Format 1
                        
                      
- Text-data is displayed on the standard output device during compilation. There is no run-time effect. 
                     
                        Format 2
                        
                      
- Version-number is the content of the entire source line following the "=", excluding leading and trailing spaces. 
- The character string formed by concatenating "@(#)", version-number, and a null character (binary zero) is included in the
                     object file. If version-number begins with the characters "@(#)", the compiler does not concatenate these characters when
                     forming the character string. In other words, only a single "@(#)" will be included in the object file, whether version-number includes that string or not. 
                  
Note: version-number can be any text string, but it is intended to contain a version number for which a pattern matching tool, such as the UNIX
                  sccs what command, can search the object file.