Fortran – Basic Syntax

Fortran basic syntax

In this guide, we will discuss Fortran Basic Syntax. A Fortran program is made of a collection of program units like a main program, modules, and external subprograms or procedures.

Each program contains one main program and may or may not contain other program units. The syntax of the main program is as follows βˆ’

program program_name
implicit none      

! type declaration statements      
! executable statements  

end program program_name

A Simple Program in Fortran

Let’s write a program that adds two numbers and prints the result βˆ’

program addNumbers

! This simple program adds two numbers
   implicit none

! Type declarations
   real :: a, b, result

! Executable statements
   a = 12.0
   b = 15.0
   result = a + b
   print *, 'The total is ', result

end program addNumbers

When you compile and execute the above program, it produces the following result βˆ’

The total is 27.0000000    

Please note that βˆ’

  • All Fortran programs start with the keyword program and end with the keyword end program, followed by the name of the program.
  • The implicit none statement allows the compiler to check that all your variable types are declared properly. You must always use implicit none at the start of every program.
  • Comments in Fortran are started with the exclamation mark (!), as all characters after this (except in a character string) are ignored by the compiler.
  • The print * command displays data on the screen.
  • Indentation of code lines is a good practice for keeping a program readable.
  • Fortran allows both uppercase and lowercase letters. Fortran is case-insensitive, except for string literals.

Basics

The basic character set of Fortran contains βˆ’

  • the letters A … Z and a … z
  • the digits 0 … 9
  • the underscore (_) character
  • the special characters = : + blank – * / ( ) [ ] , . $ ‘ ! ” % & ; < > ?

Tokens are made of characters in the basic character set. A token could be a keyword, an identifier, a constant, a string literal, or a symbol.

Program statements are made of tokens.

Identifier

An identifier is a name used to identify a variable, procedure, or any other user-defined item. A name in Fortran must follow the following rules βˆ’

  • It cannot be longer than 31 characters.
  • It must be composed of alphanumeric characters (all the letters of the alphabet, and the digits 0 to 9) and underscores (_).
  • First character of a name must be a letter.
  • Names are case-insensitive

Keywords

Keywords are special words, reserved for the language. These reserved words cannot be used as identifiers or names.

The following table, lists the Fortran keywords βˆ’

The non-I/O keywords
allocatableallocateassignassignmentblock data
callcasecharactercommoncomplex
containscontinuecycledatadeallocate
defaultdodouble precisionelseelse if
elsewhereend block dataend doend functionend if
end interfaceend moduleend programend selectend subroutine
end typeend whereentryequivalenceexit
externalfunctiongo toifimplicit
ininoutintegerintentinterface
intrinsickindlenlogicalmodule
namelistnullifyonlyoperatoroptional
outparameterpausepointerprivate
programpublicrealrecursiveresult
returnsaveselect casestopsubroutine
targetthentypetype()use
WhereWhile
The I/O related keywords
backspacecloseendfileformatinquire
openprintreadrewindWrite

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