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I am trying to read some Fortran code but there is something I can't understand with array subsets operations like this one

Assume n = 3

And the arrays

INTEGER, PARAMETER :: dp = SELECTED_REAL_KIND(12)
REAL(KIND=dp)   :: P(n+1),P0(n)

what does this line exactly do?

DO i=1,n-1
  …..
  P(3:i+2) = P(3:i+2) - i*P0(1:i) / (i+1)
  ….
END DO

Is it a nested loop? Like j from 3 to i+2 for P and k from 1 to i for P0?

Thanks in advance.

1 Answer 1

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Take the line

P(3:i+2) = P(3:i+2) - i*P0(1:i) / (i+1)

and replace i with 1 (the first value it takes in the do loop)

P(3:3) = P(3:3) - 1*P0(1:1) / 2

On the lhs you have a slice (or section) of array P from element 3 to element 3, so in this case just one element -- but still an array slice not a scalar. This is updated by subtracting 1 times the (same sized) slice of array P0 and divided by 2.

It's a bit more interesting in the next iteration, with i==2 and

P(3:4) = P(3:4) - 2*P0(1:2) / 3

where the array slices are now 2 elements each. The operations on array slices are applied on corresponding elements from each array so this statement is approximately equivalent to the two statements

P(3) = P(3) - 2*P0(1) / 3
P(4) = P(4) - 2*P0(2) / 3

It's better to think of this in Fortran terms, as operations on array sections, than as some kind of syntactic sugar for nested loops.

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