Defines one or more contiguous blocks of storage shared among separate subprograms. You can define the same common block in different program units of your program. The first COMMON statement in a program unit to name a common block defines it; subsequent COMMON statements that name the block reference it. You can leave one common block (the "blank" common block) unnamed. Statement format: COMMON [/[cb]/] nlist[[,] /[cb] /nlist]... cb Is a symbolic name that identifies the common block. nlist Is one or more names of variables that identify items in the common block. The variable must not be a dummy argument, allocatable array, automatic object, function, function result, or entry to a procedure. It must not have the PARAMETER attribute. If an object of derived type is specified, it must be a sequence type. A common block is a global entity, and must not have the same name as any other global entity in the program, such as a subroutine or function. Any common block name, blank or otherwise, can appear more than once in one or more COMMON statements in a program unit. The list following each successive appearance of the same common block name is treated as a continuation of the list for the block associated with that name. A variable can appear in only one common block within a scoping unit. If an array is specified, it can be followed by an explicit-shape array specification. The array must not have the POINTER attribute and each bound in the specification must be a constant specification expression. A pointer can only be associated with pointers of the same type, kind type parameters, and rank. Nonpointer variables can be associated if they are of different numeric type. A common block can have the same name as a variable, array, record, structure, or field. However, in a program with one or more program units, a common block cannot have the same name as a function, subroutine, or entry name in the executable program. When common blocks from different program units have the same name, they share the same storage area when the units are combined into an executable program. Entities are assigned storage in common blocks on a one-for-one basis. Thus, the entities assigned by a COMMON statement in one program unit should agree with the data type of entities placed in a common block by another program unit; for example, consider a program unit containing the following statement: COMMON CENTS Consider another program unit containing the following statements: INTEGER*2 MONEY COMMON MONEY When these program units are combined into an executable program, incorrect results can occur if the 2-byte integer variable MONEY is made to correspond to the lower-addressed two bytes of the real variable CENTS. Named common blocks must be declared to have the same size in each program unit. Blank common can have different lengths in different program units.