Intel® Fortran Compiler 17.0 Developer Guide and Reference
The Intel® Fortran Compiler interprets the type of each input file by the file name extension.
The file extension determines whether a file gets passed to the compiler or to the linker. The following types of files are used with the compiler:
Files passed to the compiler: .f90, .for, .f, .fpp, .i, .i90, .ftn
Typical Fortran source files have a file extension of .f90, .for, and .f. When editing your source files, you need to choose the source form, either free-source form or fixed-source form (or a variant of fixed form called tab form). You can use a compiler option to specify the source form used by the source files (see the description for the free or fixed compiler option) or you can use specific file extensions when creating or renaming your files. For example, the compiler assumes that files with an extension of:
.f90 or .i90 are free-form source files.
.f, .for, .ftn, or .i are fixed-form (or tab-form) files.
Files passed to the linker: .a, .lib, .obj, .o, .exe, .res, .rbj, .def, .dll
The most common file extensions and their interpretations are:
Filename |
Interpretation |
Action |
---|---|---|
file.a (Linux* and OS X*) file.lib (Windows*) |
Object library |
Passed to the linker. |
file.f file.for file.ftn file.i |
Fortran fixed-form source |
Compiled by the Intel® Fortran compiler. |
file.fpp On Linux*, filenames with the following uppercase extensions: file.FPP file.F file.FOR file.FTN |
Fortran fixed-form source |
Automatically preprocessed by the Intel® Fortran preprocessor fpp; then compiled by the Intel® Fortran compiler. |
file.f90 file.i90 |
Fortran free-form source |
Compiled by the Intel® Fortran compiler. |
file.F90 (Linux* and OS X*) |
Fortran free-form source |
Automatically preprocessed by the Intel® Fortran preprocessor fpp; then compiled by the Intel® Fortran compiler. |
file.s (Linux* and OS X*) file.asm (Windows*) |
Assembly file |
Passed to the assembler. |
file.o (Linux* and OS X*) file.obj (Windows*) |
Compiled object file |
Passed to the linker. |
When you compile from the command line, you can use the compiler configuration file to specify default directories for input libraries. To specify additional directories for input files, temporary files, libraries, and for the files used by the assembler and the linker, use compiler options that specify output file and directory names.
On Windows* operating systems, many compiler options allow you to specify the name of the output file being created. These compiler options are summarized in the table below.
If you specify only a filename without an extension, a default extension is added for the file being created.
Compiler option |
Default file extension |
---|---|
/Fafile |
.ASM |
/dll:file |
.DLL |
/exe:file |
.EXE |
/map:file |
.MAP |