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Many Fortran compilers including GNU Fortran allow passing the source code
through a C preprocessor (CPP; sometimes also called the Fortran preprocessor,
FPP) to allow for conditional compilation. In the case of GNU Fortran,
this is the GNU C Preprocessor in the traditional mode. On systems with
case-preserving file names, the preprocessor is automatically invoked if the
filename extension is .F
, .FOR
, .FTN
, .fpp
,
.FPP
, .F90
, .F95
, .F03
or .F08
. To manually
invoke the preprocessor on any file, use -cpp, to disable
preprocessing on files where the preprocessor is run automatically, use
-nocpp.
If a preprocessed file includes another file with the Fortran INCLUDE
statement, the included file is not preprocessed. To preprocess included
files, use the equivalent preprocessor statement #include
.
If GNU Fortran invokes the preprocessor, __GFORTRAN__
is defined and __GNUC__
, __GNUC_MINOR__
and
__GNUC_PATCHLEVEL__
can be used to determine the version of the
compiler. See Overview for details.
While CPP is the de-facto standard for preprocessing Fortran code, Part 3 of the Fortran 95 standard (ISO/IEC 1539-3:1998) defines Conditional Compilation, which is not widely used and not directly supported by the GNU Fortran compiler. You can use the program coco to preprocess such files (http://users.erols.com/dnagle/coco.html).