Intel® Fortran Compiler Classic and Intel® Fortran Compiler Developer Guide and Reference

ID 767251
Date 6/24/2024
Public
Document Table of Contents

Program Units and Procedures

A Fortran program consists of one or more program units. There are four types of program units:

  • Main program

    The program unit that denotes the beginning of execution. It may or may not have a PROGRAM statement as its first statement.

  • External procedures

    Program units that are either user-written functions or subroutines.

  • Modules and submodules

    Program units that contain declarations, type definitions, procedures, or interfaces that can be shared by other program units. A module can be extended by one or more program units called submodules. A submodule can in turn be extended by one or more submodules.

  • Block data program units

    Program units that provide initial values for variables in named common blocks.

A program unit does not have to contain executable statements; for example, it can be a module containing interface blocks for subroutines.

A procedure can be invoked during program execution to perform a specific task. It specifies the EXTERNAL attribute for all procedure entities in the procedure declaration list. A procedure declaration is denoted by a PROCEDURE statement.

There are several kinds of procedures, as follows:

Kind of Procedure

Description

External Procedure

A procedure that is not part of any other program unit.

Module Procedure

A procedure defined within a module.

Internal Procedure1

A procedure (other than a statement function) contained within a main program, function, subroutine, or module procedure.

Intrinsic Procedure

A procedure defined by the Fortran language.

Dummy Procedure

A dummy argument specified as a procedure or appearing in a procedure reference. A dummy procedure with the POINTER attribute is a dummy procedure pointer.

Procedure Pointer

A procedure that has the EXTERNAL and POINTER attributes. It may be pointer associated with an external procedure, a module procedure, an intrinsic procedure, or a dummy procedure that is not a procedure pointer.

Statement function

A computing procedure defined by a single statement.

1 The program unit or module procedure that contains an internal procedure is called its host.

A function is invoked in an expression using the name of the function or a defined operator. It returns a single value (function result) that is used to evaluate the expression.

A subroutine is invoked in a CALL statement or by a defined assignment statement. It does not directly return a value, but values can be passed back to the calling program unit through arguments (or variables) known to the calling program.

Recursion (direct or indirect) is permitted for functions and subroutines. Prior to Fortran 2018, procedures had to be declared RECURSIVE. Fortran 2018 made recursion the default, and introduced the NON_RECURSIVE keyword. Intel® Fortran, by default, compiles procedures as non-recursive unless they are explicitly declared RECURSIVE. This default can be overridden by using the assume recursion option or the standard-semantics option on the command line; it can be changed in an OPTIONS statement.

A procedure interface refers to the properties of a procedure that interact with or are of concern to the calling program. A procedure interface can be explicitly defined in interface blocks. All program units, except block data program units, can contain interface blocks.