hamid attar
hamid attar

Reputation: 388

Direct indexing of function return value in Fortran

Is there possibility to use indexing directly on a function's return value? Something like this:

readStr()(2:5)

where readStr() is a function which returns a character string or an array. In many other languages it is quite possible, but what about Fortran? The syntax in my example of course does not compile. Is there any other syntax to be used?

Upvotes: 7

Views: 444

Answers (3)

You can avoid declaring another variable if you use associate. Whether it is any better or clearer than a temporary variable must be decided by the user. The result has to be stored somewhere anyway.

 associate(str=>readStr())
   print *, str(2:5)
 end associate

It will not be very useful for this specific case with a potentially long string but might be more useful for other similar cases that get linked here as duplicates.

Upvotes: 2

Alexander Vogt
Alexander Vogt

Reputation: 18118

No, that is not possible in Fortran. You could, however, alter your function to take an additional index array that determines which elements are returned. This example illustrates this possibility using an interface to allow for an optional specification of the indices (simplified greatly thanks to the comment by IanH):

module test_mod
  implicit none

  contains

  function squareOpt( arr, idx ) result(res)
    real, intent(in)              :: arr(:)
    integer, intent(in), optional :: idx(:)
    real,allocatable              :: res( : )
    real                          :: res_( size(arr) )
    integer                       :: stat

    ! Calculate as before
    res_ = arr*arr

    if ( present(idx) ) then
      ! Take the sub-set    
      allocate( res(size(idx)), stat=stat )
      if ( stat /= 0 ) stop 'Cannot allocate memory!'

      res = res_(idx)
    else
      ! Take the the whole array    
      allocate( res(size(arr)), stat=stat )
      if ( stat /= 0 ) stop 'Cannot allocate memory!'

      res = res_
    endif

  end function
end module

program test
  use test_mod
  implicit none

  real    :: arr(4)
  integer :: idx(2)

  arr = [ 1., 2., 3., 4. ]
  idx = [ 2, 3]

  print *, 'w/o indices',squareOpt(arr)
  print *, 'w/  indices',squareOpt(arr, idx)
end program

Upvotes: 6

IanH
IanH

Reputation: 21431

No.

But if it bothers you, you can write your own user defined functions and operators to achieve a similar outcome without having to store the result of the function reference in a separate variable.

Upvotes: 2

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