Intel® Fortran Compiler 16.0 User and Reference Guide
An integer constant is a whole number with no decimal point. It can have a leading sign and is interpreted as a decimal number.
Integer constants take the following form:
[s]n[n...][ _k]
s |
Is a sign; required if negative (-), optional if positive (+). |
n |
Is a decimal digit (0 through 9). Any leading zeros are ignored. |
k |
Is the optional kind parameter: 1 for INTEGER(1), 2 for INTEGER(2), 4 for INTEGER(4), or 8 for INTEGER(8). It must be preceded by an underscore ( _ ). |
An unsigned constant is assumed to be nonnegative.
Integer constants are interpreted as decimal values (base 10) by default. To specify a constant that is not in base 10, use the following extension syntax:
[s] [[base] #] nnn...
s |
Is an optional plus (+) or minus (-) sign. |
base |
Is any constant from 2 through 36. If base is omitted but # is specified, the integer is interpreted in base 16. If both base and # are omitted, the integer is interpreted in base 10. For bases 11 through 36, the letters A through Z represent numbers greater than 9. For example, for base 36, A represents 10, B represents 11, C represents 12, and so on, through Z, which represents 35. The case of the letters is not significant. The value of nnn cannot be bigger than 2**31-1. The value is extended with zeroes on the left or truncated on the left to make it the correct size. A minus sign for s negates the value. |
Note that compiler option integer-size can affect the KIND type parameter of INTEGER data and integer constants.
0 |
-127 |
+32123 |
47_2 |
9999999999999999999 |
Number too large. |
3.14 |
Decimal point not allowed; this is a valid REAL constant. |
32,767 |
Comma not allowed. |
33_3 |
3 is not a valid kind type for integers. |
The following seven integers are all assigned a value equal to 3,994,575 decimal:
I = 2#1111001111001111001111 m = 7#45644664 J = +8#17171717 K = #3CF3CF n = +17#2DE110 L = 3994575 index = 36#2DM8F
The following seven integers are all assigned a value equal to -3,994,575 decimal:
I = -2#1111001111001111001111
m = -7#45644664
J = -8#17171717
K = -#3CF3CF
n = -17#2DE110
L = -3994575
index = -36#2DM8F
You can use integer constants to assign values to data. The following table shows assignments to different data and lists the integer and hexadecimal values in the data:
Fortran Assignment Integer Value in Data Hexadecimal Value in Data LOGICAL(1)X INTEGER(1)X X = -128 -128 Z'80' X = 127 127 Z'7F' X = 255 -1 Z'FF' LOGICAL(2)X INTEGER(2)X X = 255 255 Z'FF' X = -32768 -32768 Z'8000' X = 32767 32767 Z'7FFF' X = 65535 -1 Z'FFFF'