| 1 | If your compiler does not recognize ANSI C headers, | 
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| 2 | compile with KR_headers defined:  either add -DKR_headers | 
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| 3 | to the definition of CFLAGS in the makefile, or insert | 
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| 4 |  | 
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| 5 | #define KR_headers | 
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| 6 |  | 
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| 7 | at the top of f2c.h , cabs.c , main.c , and sig_die.c . | 
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| 8 |  | 
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| 9 | Under MS-DOS, compile s_paus.c with -DMSDOS. | 
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| 10 |  | 
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| 11 | If you have a really ancient K&R C compiler that does not understand | 
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| 12 | void, add -Dvoid=int to the definition of CFLAGS in the makefile. | 
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| 13 |  | 
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| 14 | If you use a C++ compiler, first create a local f2c.h by appending | 
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| 15 | f2ch.add to the usual f2c.h, e.g., by issuing the command | 
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| 16 | make f2c.h | 
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| 17 | which assumes f2c.h is installed in /usr/include . | 
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| 18 |  | 
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| 19 | If your system lacks onexit() and you are not using an ANSI C | 
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| 20 | compiler, then you should compile main.c, s_paus.c, s_stop.c, and | 
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| 21 | sig_die.c with NO_ONEXIT defined.  See the comments about onexit in | 
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| 22 | the makefile. | 
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| 23 |  | 
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| 24 | If your system has a double drem() function such that drem(a,b) | 
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| 25 | is the IEEE remainder function (with double a, b), then you may | 
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| 26 | wish to compile r_mod.c and d_mod.c with IEEE_drem defined. | 
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| 27 | On some systems, you may also need to compile with -Ddrem=remainder . | 
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| 28 |  | 
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| 29 | To check for transmission errors, issue the command | 
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| 30 | make check | 
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| 31 | This assumes you have the xsum program whose source, xsum.c, | 
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| 32 | is distributed as part of "all from f2c/src".  If you do not | 
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| 33 | have xsum, you can obtain xsum.c by sending the following E-mail | 
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| 34 | message to netlib@netlib.bell-labs.com | 
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| 35 | send xsum.c from f2c/src | 
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| 36 |  | 
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| 37 | The makefile assumes you have installed f2c.h in a standard | 
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| 38 | place (and does not cause recompilation when f2c.h is changed); | 
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| 39 | f2c.h comes with "all from f2c" (the source for f2c) and is | 
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| 40 | available separately ("f2c.h from f2c"). | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | Most of the routines in libF77 are support routines for Fortran | 
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| 43 | intrinsic functions or for operations that f2c chooses not | 
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| 44 | to do "in line".  There are a few exceptions, summarized below -- | 
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| 45 | functions and subroutines that appear to your program as ordinary | 
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| 46 | external Fortran routines. | 
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| 47 |  | 
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| 48 | 1.      CALL ABORT prints a message and causes a core dump. | 
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| 49 |  | 
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| 50 | 2.      ERF(r) and DERF(d) and the REAL and DOUBLE PRECISION | 
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| 51 | error functions (with x REAL and d DOUBLE PRECISION); | 
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| 52 | DERF must be declared DOUBLE PRECISION in your program. | 
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| 53 | Both ERF and DERF assume your C library provides the | 
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| 54 | underlying erf() function (which not all systems do). | 
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| 55 |  | 
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| 56 | 3.      ERFC(r) and DERFC(d) are the complementary error functions: | 
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| 57 | ERFC(r) = 1 - ERF(r) and DERFC(d) = 1.d0 - DERFC(d) | 
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| 58 | (except that their results may be more accurate than | 
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| 59 | explicitly evaluating the above formulae would give). | 
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| 60 | Again, ERFC and r are REAL, and DERFC and d are DOUBLE | 
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| 61 | PRECISION (and must be declared as such in your program), | 
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| 62 | and ERFC and DERFC rely on your system's erfc(). | 
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| 63 |  | 
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| 64 | 4.      CALL GETARG(n,s), where n is an INTEGER and s is a CHARACTER | 
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| 65 | variable, sets s to the n-th command-line argument (or to | 
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| 66 | all blanks if there are fewer than n command-line arguments); | 
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| 67 | CALL GETARG(0,s) sets s to the name of the program (on systems | 
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| 68 | that support this feature).  See IARGC below. | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | 5.      CALL GETENV(name, value), where name and value are of type | 
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| 71 | CHARACTER, sets value to the environment value, $name, of | 
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| 72 | name (or to blanks if $name has not been set). | 
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| 73 |  | 
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| 74 | 6.      NARGS = IARGC() sets NARGS to the number of command-line | 
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| 75 | arguments (an INTEGER value). | 
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| 76 |  | 
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| 77 | 7.      CALL SIGNAL(n,func), where n is an INTEGER and func is an | 
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| 78 | EXTERNAL procedure, arranges for func to be invoked when | 
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| 79 | signal n occurs (on systems where this makes sense). | 
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| 80 |  | 
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| 81 | 8.      CALL SYSTEM(cmd), where cmd is of type CHARACTER, passes | 
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| 82 | cmd to the system's command processor (on systems where | 
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| 83 | this can be done). | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | The makefile does not attempt to compile pow_qq.c, qbitbits.c, | 
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| 86 | and qbitshft.c, which are meant for use with INTEGER*8.  To use | 
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| 87 | INTEGER*8, you must modify f2c.h to declare longint and ulongint | 
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| 88 | appropriately; then add pow_qq.o to the POW = line in the makefile, | 
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| 89 | and add " qbitbits.o qbitshft.o" to the makefile's F90BIT = line. | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | Following Fortran 90, s_cat.c and s_copy.c allow the target of a | 
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| 92 | (character string) assignment to be appear on its right-hand, at | 
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| 93 | the cost of some extra overhead for all run-time concatenations. | 
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| 94 | If you prefer the  extra efficiency that comes with the Fortran 77 | 
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| 95 | requirement that the left-hand side of a character assignment not | 
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| 96 | be involved in the right-hand side, compile s_cat.c and s_copy.c | 
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| 97 | with -DNO_OVERWRITE . | 
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| 98 |  | 
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| 99 | If your system lacks a ranlib command, you don't need it. | 
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| 100 | Either comment out the makefile's ranlib invocation, or install | 
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| 101 | a harmless "ranlib" command somewhere in your PATH, such as the | 
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| 102 | one-line shell script | 
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| 103 |  | 
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| 104 | exit 0 | 
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| 105 |  | 
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| 106 | or (on some systems) | 
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| 107 |  | 
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| 108 | exec /usr/bin/ar lts $1 >/dev/null | 
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| 109 |  | 
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| 110 | If your compiler complains about the signal calls in main.c, s_paus.c, | 
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| 111 | and signal_.c, you may need to adjust signal1.h suitably.  See the | 
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| 112 | comments in signal1.h. | 
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