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Home/ Questions/Q 866555
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T09:49:35+00:00 2026-05-15T09:49:35+00:00

I’m new to Fortran and just doing some simple things for work. And as

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I’m new to Fortran and just doing some simple things for work. And as a new programmer in general, not sure exactly how this works, so excuse me if my explanation or notation is not the best. At the top of the .F file there are common declarations. The person explaining it to me said think of it like a struct in C, and that they are global. Also in that same .F file, they have it declared with what type. So it’s something like:

COMMON SOMEVAR

INTEGER*2 SOMEVAR

And then when I actually see it being used in some other file, they declare local variables, (e.g. SOMEVAR_LOCAL) and depending on the condition, they set SOMEVAR_LOCAL = 1 or 0.

Then there is another conditional later down the line that will say something like

IF (SOMEVAR_LOCAL. eq. 1) 
SOMEVAR(PARAM) = 1;

(Again I apologize if this is not proper Fortran, but I don’t have access to the code right now). So it seems to me that there is a “struct” like variable called SOMEVAR that is of some length (2 bytes of data?), then there is a local variable that is used as a flag so that later down the line, the global struct SOMEVAR can be set to that value. But because there is (PARAM), it’s like an array for that particular instance? Thanks. Sorry for my bad explanation, but hopefully you will understand what I am asking.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T09:49:36+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 9:49 am

    The first declaration has SOMEVAR as a scalar integer of two bytes. The usage you show has SOMEVAR has an array — based on it being indexed. This is possible to do in Fortran via “sequence association” but it is poor practice. In one file you could declare SOMEVAR as INTEGER*2 and two bytes are allocated to this scalar. In another file you could declare it as INTEGER*1 SOMEVAR(2), and two bytes are reserved, this time for an array of two elements, each of one byte. Using the same common block in both files can cause these two variables to overlap, byte by byte — sequence association. Many years ago, when memory was very small, programmers did this to reduce memory usage, knowing that different subroutines were using variables at different times. The reasons to do this today are very, very limited. Mostly one shouldn’t because it is liable to be confusing.

    You can also setup sequence association with the EQUIVALENCE statement. Again, best avoided. The modern replacement for the times that one must do “tricky” things that needed the EQUIVALENCE statement is the TRANSFER function.

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