ZTRT06 computes a test ratio comparing RCOND (the reciprocal
 condition number of a triangular matrix A) and RCONDC, the estimate
 computed by ZTRCON.  Information about the triangular matrix A is
 used if one estimate is zero and the other is non-zero to decide if
 underflow in the estimate is justified.
 
RCOND
          RCOND is DOUBLE PRECISION
          The estimate of the reciprocal condition number obtained by
          forming the explicit inverse of the matrix A and computing
          RCOND = 1/( norm(A) * norm(inv(A)) ).
RCONDC
          RCONDC is DOUBLE PRECISION
          The estimate of the reciprocal condition number computed by
          ZTRCON.
UPLO
          UPLO is CHARACTER
          Specifies whether the matrix A is upper or lower triangular.
          = 'U':  Upper triangular
          = 'L':  Lower triangular
DIAG
          DIAG is CHARACTER
          Specifies whether or not the matrix A is unit triangular.
          = 'N':  Non-unit triangular
          = 'U':  Unit triangular
N
          N is INTEGER
          The order of the matrix A.  N >= 0.
A
          A is COMPLEX*16 array, dimension (LDA,N)
          The triangular matrix A.  If UPLO = 'U', the leading n by n
          upper triangular part of the array A contains the upper
          triangular matrix, and the strictly lower triangular part of
          A is not referenced.  If UPLO = 'L', the leading n by n lower
          triangular part of the array A contains the lower triangular
          matrix, and the strictly upper triangular part of A is not
          referenced.  If DIAG = 'U', the diagonal elements of A are
          also not referenced and are assumed to be 1.
LDA
          LDA is INTEGER
          The leading dimension of the array A.  LDA >= max(1,N).
RWORK
          RWORK is DOUBLE PRECISION array, dimension (N)
RAT
          RAT is DOUBLE PRECISION
          The test ratio.  If both RCOND and RCONDC are nonzero,
             RAT = MAX( RCOND, RCONDC )/MIN( RCOND, RCONDC ) - 1.
          If RAT = 0, the two estimates are exactly the same.