I have the following FORTRAN code:
FUNCTION inverse_deterministic_cdf(dist, p) RESULT(value)
!=========== result ============
REAL(C_DOUBLE) :: value
!====== input parameters =======
TYPE(deterministic), INTENT(IN) :: dist
REAL(C_DOUBLE), INTENT(IN) :: p
!======= subroutine body =======
value = p ! This is only here to suppress unused dummy argument warning
value = dist%value
END FUNCTION inverse_deterministic_cdf
In this case, inverse_deterministic_cdf
is an implementation of an inverse_cdf
interface, which is why there's the unused p
here. As you can see, I have a method of suppressing the unused dummy argument, but it feels inelegant to me. Does anyone have any best practices for how they handle this? (I also want this to be compiler agnostic.) I know how to suppress the warnings universally, but I want to be warned when I have an unused dummy argument and I'm not anticipating it.
Edit to add (upon request):
The inverse_cdf
interface is defined thusly:
INTERFACE inverse_cdf
MODULE PROCEDURE inverse_distribution_cdf, inverse_normal_cdf, inverse_lognormal_cdf, inverse_deterministic_cdf
END INTERFACE