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Home/ Questions/Q 883711
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T12:38:15+00:00 2026-05-15T12:38:15+00:00

i am looking for a way, how i can integrate a c++ code with

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i am looking for a way, how i can integrate a c++ code with fortran code (i want simply call some C/C++ functions in the fortran code).

I have found some proposals for gcc or console compilers, but i have not any idea how to translate this approach to solve integrationproblem within the visual studio.

At the time I am thinking about creating a dll form c++ code and calling it from Fortran code.

Has someone already seen a solution? Or what is about overhead for calling function from dll? My fortran code transfers a lot of memory into C function, is there any problems, if i would solve this problem with dll?

thx.

PS
I am using Visual Studio 2008 Prof and Intel compilers 10

PPS
I think, i have to specify more concrete, what i want: i want to compile a fortran project in visual studio, which uses some C functions.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T12:38:15+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 12:38 pm

    There is a new way to do this that has many advantages — use the Fortran 2003 ISO C Binding. This is a standard and therefore largely OS and language independent way of interfacing Fortran and C (and any language that will use C calling conventions). Intel Fortran 11 supports along with numerous other compilers — not sure about version 10. Using the ISO C Binding, you can match any C name (any case), don’t have to worry about underscores (and variations between compilers) and can specify the types and calling methods (by reference, by value) for the arguments. Intel provides some examples in a folder with their compiler; there are also examples in the gfortran manual and a discussion of additional considerations for Windows. There are previous questions & answers here and on the Intel Fortran forum.

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