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%VAL()
Construct%VAL(arg)
The %VAL()
construct specifies that an argument,
arg, is to be passed by value, instead of by reference
or descriptor.
%VAL()
is restricted to actual arguments in
invocations of external procedures.
Use of %VAL()
is recommended only for code that
is accessing facilities outside of GNU Fortran, such as
operating system or windowing facilities.
It is best to constrain such uses to isolated portions of
a program--portions the deal specifically and exclusively
with low-level, system-dependent facilities.
Such portions might well provide a portable interface for
use by the program as a whole, but are themselves not
portable, and should be thoroughly tested each time they
are rebuilt using a new compiler or version of a compiler.
Implementation Note: Currently, g77
passes
all arguments either by reference or by descriptor.
Thus, use of %VAL()
tends to be restricted to cases
where the called procedure is written in a language other
than Fortran that supports call-by-value semantics.
(C is an example of such a language.)
See section Procedures (SUBROUTINE and FUNCTION),
for detailed information on
how this particular version of g77
passes arguments
to procedures.
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