Intel® Fortran Compiler 16.0 User and Reference Guide
Statement: An interface block that defines generic assignment. The only procedures allowed in the interface block are subroutines that can be referenced as defined assignments.
The initial line for such an interface block takes the following form:
INTERFACE ASSIGNMENT (=)
The subroutines within the interface block must have two nonoptional arguments, the first with intent OUT or INOUT, and the second with intent IN.
A defined assignment is treated as a reference to a subroutine. The left side of the assignment corresponds to the first dummy argument of the subroutine; the right side of the assignment corresponds to the second argument.
The ASSIGNMENT keyword extends or redefines an assignment operation if both sides of the equal sign are of the same derived type.
Defined elemental assignment is indicated by specifying ELEMENTAL in the SUBROUTINE statement.
Any procedure reference involving generic assignment must be resolvable to one specific procedure; it must be unambiguous. For more information, see Unambiguous Generic Procedure References.
The following is an example of a procedure interface block defining assignment:
INTERFACE ASSIGNMENT (=) SUBROUTINE BIT_TO_NUMERIC (NUM, BIT) INTEGER, INTENT(OUT) :: NUM LOGICAL, INTENT(IN) :: BIT(:) END SUBROUTINE BIT_TO_NUMERIC SUBROUTINE CHAR_TO_STRING (STR, CHAR) USE STRING_MODULE ! Contains definition of type STRING TYPE(STRING), INTENT(OUT) :: STR ! A variable-length string CHARACTER(*), INTENT(IN) :: CHAR END SUBROUTINE CHAR_TO_STRING END INTERFACE
The following example shows two equivalent ways to reference subroutine BIT_TO_NUMERIC:
CALL BIT_TO_NUMERIC(X, (NUM(I:J))) X = NUM(I:J)
The following example shows two equivalent ways to reference subroutine CHAR_TO_STRING:
CALL CHAR_TO_STRING(CH, '432C') CH = '432C'
The following is an example of a declaration and reference to a defined assignment:
!Converting circle data to interval data. module mod1 TYPE CIRCLE REAL radius, center_point(2) END TYPE CIRCLE TYPE INTERVAL REAL lower_bound, upper_bound END TYPE INTERVAL CONTAINS SUBROUTINE circle_to_interval(I,C) type (interval),INTENT(OUT)::I type (circle),INTENT(IN)::C !Project circle center onto the x=-axis !Note: the length of the interval is the diameter of the circle I%lower_bound = C%center_point(1) - C%radius I%upper_bound = C%center_point(1) + C%radius END SUBROUTINE circle_to_interval end module mod1 PROGRAM assign use mod1 TYPE(CIRCLE) circle1 TYPE(INTERVAL) interval1 INTERFACE ASSIGNMENT(=) module procedure circle_to_interval END INTERFACE !Begin executable part of program circle1%radius = 2.5 circle1%center_point = (/3.0,5.0/) interval1 = circle1 . . . END PROGRAM