The following examples show a variety of VSI Fortran commands. Each command is followed by a description of the output files it produces. 1. $ FORTRAN/LIST AAA.F90, BBB.F90, CCC.F90 Source files AAA.F90, BBB.F90, and CCC.F90 are compiled as separate files, producing object files named AAA.OBJ, BBB.OBJ, and CCC.OBJ; and listing files named AAA.LIS, BBB.LIS, and CCC.LIS. 2. $ FORTRAN XXX+YYY+ZZZ Source files XXX.F90, YYY.F90, and ZZZ.F90 are concatenated and compiled as one file, producing an object file named XXX.OBJ, but no listing file. (A listing file named XXX.LIS would be produced in batch mode.) 3. $ FORTRAN/OBJECT=SQUARE/NOLIST <RET> _File: CIRCLE The source file CIRCLE.F90 is compiled, producing an object file named SQUARE.OBJ, but no listing file. 4. $ FORTRAN AAA+BBB,CCC/LIST Two object files are produced: AAA.OBJ (comprising AAA.F90 and BBB.F90) and CCC.OBJ (comprising CCC.F90). One listing file is produced: CCC.LIS (comprising CCC.F90). 5. $ FORTRAN ABC+CIRC/NOOBJECT+XYZ When you include a qualifier in a list of files that are to be concatenated, the qualifier affects all files in the list. The Fortran command shown in this example completely suppresses the object file. That is, source files ABC.F90, CIRC.F90, and XYZ.F90 are concatenated and compiled, but no object file is produced.