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Full Discussion: Unmatched 'then'
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Unmatched 'then' Post 6419 by akpopa on Tuesday 4th of September 2001 06:16:33 PM
Old 09-04-2001
patvdv--No problem about that, it gave me something new to try on this mess.

Optimus_P--I tried your suggestion, it still gives the 'then' unmatched error (Error Line number had moved up to that of the if line).

I did everything the way I did it because I am making some changes to someone---who is of course unavailable---elses code. They had some similar structures so I basically just adapted it for mine. These structures had the semi colon's and the '/' and worked just fine. As a matter of fact, everthing inside the if statement of mine works fine so long as it is not placed inside the if statement.

Thanks for trying and I appreciate your reading suggestion.

 

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RATFOR(1)						      General Commands Manual							 RATFOR(1)

NAME
ratfor - rational Fortran dialect SYNOPSIS
ratfor [ option ... ] [ filename ... ] DESCRIPTION
Ratfor converts a rational dialect of Fortran into ordinary irrational Fortran. Ratfor provides control flow constructs essentially iden- tical to those in C: statement grouping: { statement; statement; statement } decision-making: if (condition) statement [ else statement ] switch (integer value) { case integer: statement ... [ default: ] statement } loops: while (condition) statement for (expression; condition; expression) statement do limits statement repeat statement [ until (condition) ] break [n] next [n] and some syntactic sugar to make programs easier to read and write: free form input: multiple statements/line; automatic continuation comments: # this is a comment translation of relationals: >, >=, etc., become .GT., .GE., etc. return (expression) returns expression to caller from function define: define name replacement include: include filename The option -h causes quoted strings to be turned into 27H constructs. -C copies comments to the output, and attempts to format it neatly. Normally, continuation lines are marked with a & in column 1; the option -6x makes the continuation character x and places it in column 6. Ratfor is best used with f77(1). SEE ALSO
f77(1) B. W. Kernighan and P. J. Plauger, Software Tools, Addison-Wesley, 1976. RATFOR(1)
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