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1.1 ! root 1: .TI F77/SOURCE "Sep. 15, 1984" ! 2: Format of Source Code Accepted by the f77 Compiler ! 3: ! 4: F77 recognizes standard Fortran 77 source. Lines with 'C' or '*' in column ! 5: one or that are blank in columns 1-72 are comments. Other lines have ! 6: the following layout: ! 7: ! 8: .nf ! 9: 1-5: statement number field ! 10: 6: continuation column (continuation if not blank or 0) ! 11: 7-72: statement body field ! 12: 73-80: sequence field ! 13: .fi ! 14: ! 15: Short lines are padded with blanks to column 72. ! 16: ! 17: The rest of this help file describes non-standard extensions to the ! 18: format and what they mean to f77. ! 19: ! 20: F77 normally ignores case (except within Hollerith constants and ! 21: character strings); thus a comment may also be indicated by a ! 22: lower case 'c' in column one. ! 23: ! 24: In character strings, the following backslash escapes are recognized: ! 25: ! 26: .nf ! 27: \\n newline character ! 28: \\t tab character ! 29: \\b backspace character ! 30: \\f form feed character ! 31: \\0 null character ! 32: \\' apostrophe (does not terminate string) ! 33: \\" quotation mark (does not terminate string) ! 34: \\\\ \\ ! 35: .fi ! 36: ! 37: F77 allows strings to be delimited by either apostrophes (') or double ! 38: quotes ("). Whichever starts the string must also end the string. ! 39: ! 40: Variable names may be up to 16 characters in length, and all 16 characters ! 41: are significant. ! 42: ! 43: Instead of using spaces to skip to column 7, a tab may be used. ! 44: Continuation lines may be indicated by '&' in column one. In both ! 45: these cases, the statement body field starts with the character after ! 46: the tab or '&' and continues to the last character of the source line ! 47: whether before or after column 72. ! 48: ! 49: This can effect the length of Holleriths and strings that are split across ! 50: several lines. This is rare, but is documented here for completeness. ! 51: In the following example, there are no trailing blanks in the source ! 52: file. Tabs are used in the first format statement to skip to the ! 53: statement body field, blanks are used in the second format statement: ! 54: ! 55: .nf ! 56: print 100 ! 57: c tab between '100' and 'format' ! 58: 100 format ( 'abcdefghijklmn ! 59: .opq') ! 60: ! 61: print 200 ! 62: c spaces between '200' and 'format' ! 63: 200 format ( 'abcdefghijklmn ! 64: .opq') ! 65: end ! 66: .fi ! 67: ! 68: The printout is: ! 69: ! 70: .nf ! 71: abcdefghijklmnopq ! 72: abcdefghijklmn opq ! 73: .fi ! 74: ! 75: Because of the tab after '100' in the line containing format 100, ! 76: that line is not padded with blanks; ! 77: thus the 'opq' in the next line immediately follows ! 78: the 'abcdefghijklmn' in the string in the format ! 79: and also in the output. ! 80: ! 81: Since blanks were used between '200' and 'format' in the line ! 82: containing format 200, ! 83: that line is padded with blanks out to column 72 so 'opq' ! 84: is separated from 'abcdefghijklmn' by 40 blanks in the format and ! 85: in the output.
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