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I have one question with mixing C-string and fortran-string in one file.

Supposed I am playing with the name string with fixed length 9, I define a length Macro like

#define NAME_LEN 9

in a .c file.

There is an existing fortran-function, let's name it fortran_function(char* name)

Now I have to call this fortran function in a c function, let's name is

c_function(char name[]) {

   fortran_function(name)

}

Now the problem is, how should I declare the c_function signature?

c_function(char name[])
c_function(char name[NAME_LEN +1])

or

c_function(char name[NAME_LEN])

Under what situations, I should use 9 as name length or 10?

My understanding is that, as long as you passed a null-terminated string with 9 characters to the c_function, all the declaration are correct. Is that right?

Any other concern should be put here? Any potential bugs?

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  • 1
    To get a complete answer you should post the actual Fortran procedure interface and give some indication as to how the Fortran procedure uses the argument. If the Fortran code isn't using the C interoperability features that MSB refers to, then the answer is also potentially compiler specific.
    – IanH
    Jan 30, 2014 at 3:17

3 Answers 3

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There's one more gotcha here, if I remember correctly. Fortran does not use null-terminated strings; instead, it pads the right end of the buffer with 0x20 (space). So, if you have access to the Fortran source, I would modify the function signature to take the length of the passed-in string as an argument. Otherwise, you will probably crash the Fortran side of the code.

2

Dave is correct, the standard Fortran concept for strings is fixed-length, padded with blanks on the right. (Fortran now also have variable length strings, but these are not yet common and would be very tricky to inter-operate with C.) If you want the lengths fixed, then have the same parameter NAME_LEN in your Fortran code, with the same value. Dave's suggestion of an additional length argument is probably better.

An additional refinement is to use the ISO C Binding facility on the Fortran side (corrected per the comment!)

subroutine Fort_String_code (my_string), bind (C, name="Fort_String_code")
use iso_c_binding
integer, parameter :: NAME_LEN = 9
character (kind=c_char, len=1), dimension (NAME_LEN), intent (inout) :: my_string 

etc. The "bind" name is the name by which C can call the Fortran routine -- it can be different from the Fortran name. Also provided as part of the iso_c_binding is the symbol C_NULL_CHAR which you can use in the Fortran code to provide the terminating null character that C expects, etc.

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  • Absolutely, +1.0D6 etc..., but "if the type is character, the length type parameter is interoperable if and only if its value is one."
    – IanH
    Jan 30, 2014 at 3:12
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There's no difference to those calls. The c compiler will treat them all as char*. You just have to make sure you null terminate it before you use it in c. If you're only using the string in the fortran side and the c functions are just holding on to it, then you don't need to do anything.

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  • miked is correct here, but, as Dave says below, you should track the length so the fortran code knows what's going on.
    – JimR
    Nov 16, 2010 at 4:29

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