Bibliographic Information

Fortran 95/2003 explained

Michael Metcalf, John Reid and Malcolm Cohen

(Numerical mathematics and scientific computation)

Oxford University Press, c2004

  • : pbk

Available at  / 21 libraries

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Note

Includes index

ISBN of 2009 reprinted hbk. : 9780198526933

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Fortran remains one of the principal languages used in scientific, numerical, and engineering programming, and a series of revisions to the standard versions of the language have progressively enhanced its power. The latest standard - Fortran 2003 - greatly extends the power of the language, by introducing object-oriented concepts, interoperability with C, better integration with operating systems and many other enhancements. This text details all these new features. Fortran 95/2003 Explained, significantly expands on the second edition of Fortran 90/95 Explained (also published by Oxford University Press): the opening chapters contain a complete description of the Fortran 95 language and are followed by descriptions of three formally approved extensions; six completely new chapters describe in detail the features that are new in Fortran 2003, but the distinction between the various language levels is kept clear throughout. Authored by three leading experts in the development of the language, this is a complete and authoritative description of the two languages (Fortran 95 and Fortran 2003). It is intended for new and existing users of Fortran, and for all those involved in scientific and numerical computing. It is suitable as textbook for teaching and, with its extensive index, as a handy reference for practitioners.

Table of Contents

  • Whence Fortran?
  • Language elements
  • Expressions and assignments
  • Control Constructs
  • Program units and procedures
  • Array features
  • Specification statements
  • Intrinsic procedures
  • Data transfers
  • Operations on external files
  • Floating-point exception handling
  • Allocatable array extensions
  • Enhanced module facilities
  • Interoperability with C
  • Type parameters and procedure pointers
  • Object-oriented programing
  • Establishing and moving data
  • Miscellaneous enhancements
  • Input/output enhancements
  • Other features
  • A. Intrinsic procedures
  • B. Obsolescent features
  • C. Pointer example
  • D. Avoiding compilation cascades
  • E. Fortran terms
  • F. Solutions to exercises
  • Index

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