Starts two or more data elements in one program unit at the same storage location, thereby overlaying them in memory. Statement format: EQUIVALENCE (nlist)[,(nlist)]... nlist Is a list of variables, array elements, arrays, or character substring references, separated by commas. You must specify at least two of these entities in each list. The elements named within each set of parentheses are given the same storage location. The data elements do not have to be of the same type or length. An equivalency begins with the first byte of each element. When an array or substring element is equivalenced, the entire array or string is equivalenced in its normal linear storage. You cannot equivalence array or string elements in a manner that is inconsistent with their normal linear order. You cannot equivalence elements of the same array or string. You cannot equivalence two elements that are both in common areas. The following objects cannot be specified in EQUIVALENCE statements: o A dummy argument o An allocatable array o A pointer o An object of nonsequence derived type o An object of sequence derived type containing a pointer in the structure o A function, entry, or result name o A named constant o A structure component o A subobject of any of the above objects You can identify a multidimensional array element by a single subscript. The single subscript designates the absolute position of the element within the array.