9.121 GETARG — Get command line arguments

Description:

Retrieve the POS-th argument that was passed on the command line when the containing program was invoked.

This intrinsic routine is provided for backwards compatibility with GNU Fortran 77. In new code, programmers should consider the use of the GET_COMMAND_ARGUMENT — Get command line arguments intrinsic defined by the Fortran 2003 standard.

Standard:

GNU extension

Class:

Subroutine

Syntax:

CALL GETARG(POS, VALUE)

Arguments:
POSShall be of type INTEGER and not wider than the default integer kind; POS \geq 0
VALUEShall be of type CHARACTER and of default kind.
Return value:

After GETARG returns, the VALUE argument holds the POSth command line argument. If VALUE cannot hold the argument, it is truncated to fit the length of VALUE. If there are less than POS arguments specified at the command line, VALUE will be filled with blanks. If POS = 0, VALUE is set to the name of the program (on systems that support this feature).

Example:
PROGRAM test_getarg
  INTEGER :: i
  CHARACTER(len=32) :: arg

  DO i = 1, iargc()
    CALL getarg(i, arg)
    WRITE (*,*) arg
  END DO
END PROGRAM
See also:

GNU Fortran 77 compatibility function: IARGC — Get the number of command line arguments Fortran 2003 functions and subroutines: GET_COMMAND — Get the entire command line, GET_COMMAND_ARGUMENT — Get command line arguments, COMMAND_ARGUMENT_COUNT — Get number of command line arguments