Date: Tue, 30 Sep 1997 09:00:58 +0700 (GMT) From: Alexey Yakovlev To: "Jude T. DaShiell" cc: djgpp AT delorie DOT com Subject: Re: g77 and functions In-Reply-To: <199709260155.VAA27568@eagle1.eaglenet.com> Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Precedence: bulk On Thu, 25 Sep 1997, Jude T. DaShiell wrote: > One problem with g77 for me is > none of the functions appear to have > any documentation in info. g77-0.5.21 info (don't know how about earlier version) contains documentation on intrinsic functions and subroutines. (go to *Language:: section and then to *Functions and Subroutines:: and then to *Table of Intrinsic Functions::). > So I'm interested to know if > djgpp followed a standard for its functions > which machine architecture did it emulate? It depends on the g77 version. Since version 0.5.20 libf2c.a includes Dave Love's U77 library. All timing subroutines and many unix specific ones are there. I'm not sure that they will all work under DJGPP but, actually, most of them are just stubs for corresponding C functions. If C function works then Fortran's should do as well. For more details download the latest g77 sources from any gnu mirror and look in the f/runtime/libU77 subdirectory. BTW, you can get g77-0.5.21 binaries for DJGPP from http://www.catalysis.nsk.su/~jack/g770521b.zip OR ftp://quant.catalysis.nsk.su/pub/djgpp/g770521b.zip Regards Alexey ================================================================ Alexey Yakovlev, Quantum Chemistry Lab. Boreskov Institute of Catalysis, Russian Academy of Sciences pr. Lavrentieva 5, 630090 Novosibirsk, Russia phone: +7-(3832)-350264, fax: +7-(3832)-355766 or 357687 e-mail: jack AT catalysis DOT nsk DOT su ================================================================