Can I compile Fortran 90 files with a Fortran 95 compiler? There seems to be a lot for Fortran 95 but not Fortran 90.
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1www-eio.upc.es/lceio/manuals/Fortran95-Manual.pdf says that Fortran 95 deleted some "obsolescent features" from Fortran 90.– Anschel Schaffer-CohenMay 17, 2011 at 2:45
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2What Anschel said. With very minor exceptions, which should cause you embarrasment if they apply to your code, F95 is a superset of F90.– Jonathan DursiMay 17, 2011 at 3:03
2 Answers
Yes, you can compile Fortran 90 programs with a Fortran 95 compiler. Actually, most of the compilers out there are now largely but not totally compliant with Fortran 2003. Unless you have unusual requirements, you are better off with a Fortran 95/2003/2008 compiler rather than a Fortran 90 only one. Fortran 95 is somewhat of a "bug fix" to Fortran 90 ... it was a modest update based upon the experience with actually using Fortran 90, which was a huge change from Fortran 77. For example, it is easier to have memory leaks in Fortran 90 ... in Fortran 95 local allocatable variables must be automatically deallocated upon exit from a subroutine so the programmer doesn't have to explicitly do the deallocation. In Fortran 90, if the deallocation wasn't explicitly coded, a memory leak was allowed to occur.
For a free compiler, recent versions of gfortran are quite good.