Apologies if this is too naive or obvious but after a fair bit of searching around, I'm not 100% sure that I understand the fortran/unix interface. My uncertainty is regarding the nature of .src, .f, then .o, and .out files that you run into when compiling fortran programs into a unix executable. It's tough to google file extensions like this. But if you could tell me if I've got this straight, I'd really appreciate it!
.src is the source file which contains the meaty fortran code
.f is the 'host-language specific include file' that tells your fortran compiler a little bit about the source code. It's sometimes interactive.
--- After you've obtained .o or .out files, can throw away the .src and .f files, yeah?
.o is the binary object file that results from compiling but not linking the fortran .f and .src files. It contains the same meat but now converted into machine-specific instructions?
.out is the linked object file(s) which is executable and remains dependent on the .o file(s) and is machine-specific. The .out file extension is not really needed and is often omitted?
I think that covers it. Thanks for any corrects or further descriptions.
Kyle