Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-2673616E-E0F2-4668-B13E-8DE111BA8E98
Visible to Intel only — GUID: GUID-2673616E-E0F2-4668-B13E-8DE111BA8E98
ABSTRACT INTERFACE
Statement: Defines an abstract interface.
ABSTRACT INTERFACE
[interface-body]...
END INTERFACE
interface-body |
Is one or more function or subroutine subprograms or a procedure pointer. A function must end with END FUNCTION and a subroutine must end with END SUBROUTINE. The subprogram must not contain a statement function or a DATA, ENTRY, or FORMAT statement; an entry name can be used as a procedure name. The subprogram can contain a USE statement. |
An abstract interface block defines an interface whose name can be used in a PROCEDURE declaration statement to declare subprograms with identical arguments and characteristics.
An abstract interface block cannot contain a PROCEDURE statement or a MODULE PROCEDURE statement.
Interface blocks can appear in the specification part of the program unit that invokes the external or dummy procedure.
An interface block must not appear in a block data program unit.
An interface block comprises its own scoping unit, and does not inherit anything from its host through host association.
The function or subroutine named in the interface-body cannot have the same name as a keyword that specifies an intrinsic type.
To make an interface block available to multiple program units (through a USE statement), place the interface block in a module.
Previously, within an interface block, you needed to individually declare subroutines and functions that had the same argument keywords and characteristics. For example:
INTERFACE
SUBROUTINE SUB_ONE (X)
REAL, INTENT(IN) :: X
END SUBROUTINE SUB_ONE
SUBROUTINE SUB_TWO (X)
REAL, INTENT(IN) :: X
END SUBROUTINE SUB_TWO
...
END INTERFACE
Now you can use an abstract interface to specify a subprogram name for these identical arguments and characteristics. For example:
ABSTRACT INTERFACE
SUBROUTINE TEMPLATE (X)
REAL, INTENT(IN) :: X
END SUBROUTINE TEMPLATE
END INTERFACE
You can then use the subprogram in the abstract interface as a template in a PROCEDURE statement to declare procedures. For example:
PROCEDURE (TEMPLATE) :: SUB_ONE, SUB_TWO, ...