Selected development examples from Numerical Recipes in FORTRAN 77
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Updated
Jul 18, 2024 - Fortran
Fortran is a statically typed compiled programming language that is especially suited to numeric computation, and scientific computing.
While Fortran has been in use since its inception by John Backus at IBM in 1957, it still remains popular today, especially for computationally intensive
applications including numerical weather prediction, finite element analysis, computational fluid dynamics, computational physics, crystallography, and
computational chemistry. Despite its age, new language revisions include syntax and semantics for modern language ideas including pointers, recursion,
object orientated programming features, and parallel programming using Coarray Fortran.
Selected development examples from Numerical Recipes in FORTRAN 77
Add capability to analyze Fortran & Shell in SonarQube through i-Code CNES.
i-Code CNES is a static code analysis tool to help developpers write code compliant with CNES coding rules.
An approachable introduction to Fortran.
A program that inputs DNI numbers and returns DNI number and encoded letter
A refactored version of SPARSKIT2 from Fortran77 to Fortran95
real-valued gamma function in quad-precision using classic Fortran77
Three tools to deal with Fortran code: fixed to free source form converter, upper- to lowercase converter, formatter for variable declarations
The epic Hello World program in the Fortran77 language
A curated list of awesome FORTRAN 77 resources
Open Fortran Compiler
backpropagation neural networks fortran
Explain old-style programming idioms used in FORTRAN 77 programs
A collection of games Written in each version of the Fortran programming language
A port of The Oregon Trail to Fortran 77, originally created in HP time-shared Basic by Don Rawitsch, Bill Heinemann, and Paul Dillenberger:
Created by John W. Backus
Released April 1957