Explicitly specifies the properties of data objects or functions. Type declarations must precede all executable statements, can be declared only once, and cannot be used to change the type of a symbolic name that has already been implicitly assumed to be another type. Type declaration statements can initialize data in the same way as the DATA statement: by having values, bounded by slashes, listed immediately after the symbolic name of the entity.
1 – Numeric
Statement format: type[*n] [[,att]...::] v [*n][/clist/][,v [*n][/clist/]]... type Is any of the following data type specifiers: BYTE (equivalent to INTEGER*1) DOUBLE PRECISION LOGICAL COMPLEX INTEGER DOUBLE COMPLEX REAL n Is an integer that specifies (in bytes) the length of "v". It overrides the length that is implied by the data type. The value of n must specify an acceptable length for the type of "v" (see the HP Fortran for OpenVMS Language Reference Manual). BYTE, DOUBLE PRECISION, and DOUBLE COMPLEX data types have one acceptable length; thus, for these data types, the "n" specifier is invalid. If an array declarator is used, the "n" specifier must be positioned immediately after the array name. att Is one of the following attribute specifiers: ALLOCATABLE POINTER AUTOMATIC PRIVATE DIMENSION PUBLIC EXTERNAL SAVE INTENT STATIC INTRINSIC TARGET OPTIONAL VOLATILE PARAMETER v Is the name of a data object or function. It can optionally be followed by: o An array specification, if the object is an array o A character length, if the object is of type character o An initialization expression or, for pointer objects, =>NULL() clist Is a list of constants, as in a DATA statement. If "v" is the symbolic name of a constant, the "clist" cannot be present. A numeric data type declaration statement can define arrays by including array specifications in the list. A numeric type declaration statement can assign initial values to variables or arrays if it specifies a list of constants (the "clist"). The specified constants initialize only the variable or array that immediately precedes them. The "clist" cannot have more than one item unless it initializes an array. When the "clist" initializes an array, it must contain a value for every element in the array. If =>NULL() appears for a pointer, the pointer's initial association status is disassociated. In a function declaration, an array must be a deferred-shape array if it has the POINTER attribute; otherwise, it must be an explicit-shape array. The double colon separator (::) is required only if the declaration contains an attribute specifier or an initialization expression; otherwise it is optional. The same attribute must not appear more than once in a given type declaration statement, and an entity cannot be given the same attribute more than once in a scoping unit. If the PARAMETER attribute is specified, the declaration must contain an initialization expression. The following objects cannot be initialized in a type declaration statement: o A dummy argument o A function result o An object in a named common block (unless the type declaration is in a block data program unit) o An object in blank common o An allocatable array o A pointer o An external name o An intrinsic name o An automatic object o An object that has the AUTOMATIC attribute
2 – Character
Format: CHARACTER[*len[,] [[,att]...::] v[*len] [/clist/] [,v[*len] [/clist/]]... len Is an unsigned integer constant, an integer constant expression enclosed in parentheses, or an asterisk (*) enclosed in parentheses. The value of "len" specifies the length of the character data elements. att Is one of the following attribute specifiers: ALLOCATABLE POINTER AUTOMATIC PRIVATE DIMENSION PUBLIC EXTERNAL SAVE INTENT STATIC INTRINSIC TARGET OPTIONAL VOLATILE PARAMETER v Is the symbolic name of a constant, variable, array, statement function or function subprogram, or array specification. The name can optionally be followed by a data type length specifier (*len or *(*)). clist Is a list of constants, as in a DATA statement. If "v" is the symbolic name of a constant, "clist" must not be present. If you use CHARACTER*len, "len" is the default length specification for that list. If an item in that list does not have a length specification, the item's length is "len". However, if an item does have a length specification, it overrides the default length specified in CHARACTER*len. When an asterisk length specification *(*) is used for a function name or dummy argument, it assumes the length of the corresponding function reference or actual argument. Similarly, when an asterisk length specification is used for the symbolic name of a constant, the name assumes the length of the actual constant it represents. For example, STRING assumes a 9-byte length in the following statements: CHARACTER*(*) STRING PARAMETER (STRING = 'VALUE IS:') The length specification must range from 1 to 65535. If no length is specified, a length of 1 is assumed. Character type declaration statements can define arrays if they include array specifications in their list. The array specification goes first if both an array specification and a length are specified. A character type declaration statement can assign initial values to variables or arrays if it specifies a list of constants (the clist). The specified constants initialize only the variable or array that immediately precedes them. The "clist" cannot have more than one element unless it initializes an array. When the "clist" initializes an array, it must contain a value for every element in the array. In a function declaration, an array must be a deferred-shape array if it has the POINTER attribute; otherwise, it must be an explicit-shape array. The double colon separator (::) is required only if the declaration contains an attribute specifier or an initialization expression; otherwise it is optional. The same attribute must not appear more than once in a given type declaration statement, and an entity cannot be given the same attribute more than once in a scoping unit. If the PARAMETER attribute is specified, the declaration must contain an initialization expression. The following objects cannot be initialized in a type declaration statement: o A dummy argument o A function result o An object in a named common block (unless the type declaration is in a block data program unit) o An object in blank common o An allocatable array o A pointer o An external name o An intrinsic name o An automatic object o An object that has the AUTOMATIC attribute NOTE The CHARACTER*len form for a CHARACTER declaration is obsolescent in Fortran 95. VSI Fortran flags obsolescent features, but fully supports them.