I have a simple function that returns a time object based on a time string:
FUNCTION getTime(timeStr)RESULT(time)
IMPLICIT NONE
CHARACTER(LEN=19),INTENT(IN) :: timeStr
TYPE timeType
INTEGER :: yyyy,mo,dd,hh,mm,ss
ENDTYPE timeType
TYPE(timeType) :: time
READ(UNIT=timeStr( 1: 4),'(I4)')time%yyyy
READ(UNIT=timeStr( 6: 7),'(I2)')time%mo
READ(UNIT=timeStr( 9:10),'(I2)')time%dd
READ(UNIT=timeStr(12:13),'(I2)')time%hh
READ(UNIT=timeStr(15:16),'(I2)')time%mm
READ(UNIT=timeStr(18:19),'(I2)')time%ss
ENDFUNCTION getTime
I call it from the parent routine as:
umwmTime1=getTime(umwmStartTimeStr)
umwmTime2=getTime(umwmStopTimeStr)
where umwmTime 1 and 2 are declared as:
TYPE timeType
INTEGER :: yyyy,mo,dd,hh,mm,ss
ENDTYPE timeType
TYPE(timeType) :: umwmTime1,umwmTime2
The compile error message I get is:
PGF90-S-0099-Illegal use of derived type (ESMF_interface_UMWM.F90: 282)
PGF90-S-0099-Illegal use of derived type (ESMF_interface_UMWM.F90: 283)
0 inform, 0 warnings, 2 severes, 0 fatal for umwm_component_run
Lines 282 and 283 point are function calls in the parent routine.
However if I use subroutine (instead of function) to get umwmTime1 and umwmTime2 as INTENT(OUT) arguments, I get no problems. What am I doing wrong with the function?
timevariable within the function, and then copy the final result into the return variable? – Zhenya Oct 24 '11 at 17:27