jon@astro.ucla.edu (Jonathan Eisenhamer) (02/06/90)
To All, I am looking for a Fortran-to-C source conversion utility. Pointers to companies, public domain, archives, and other lists are all welcome. A summary will be posted if appropriate. Thank you for your time, Jonathan Eisenhamer jon@astro.ucla.edu jon@uclastro.bitnet bonnie::jon (span 5.708) (213)206-8596
ST502509@brownvm.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) (02/07/90)
There was a few days ago something like this mentioned in comp.sys.next So try to get the the info there, someone should remember. It was a public domain program as far as i know... If you cant find it, there is an archive where the discussions of comp.sys.next can be found: FTP = j.cc.purdue.edu 128.210.9.2 Ronald
SURF159%KUB.NL@cunyvm.cuny.edu (NIH Amsterdam, wg5) (02/07/90)
> > To All, > I am looking for a Fortran-to-C source conversion utility. > Pointers to companies, public domain, archives, and other lists are > all welcome. > There's a module library on the net reachable by netlib@reasearch.att.com If you send a mail with the message 'send index' you get the index of the modules and how to send your requests. Marcel Timmerman
V062QJJQ@ubvmsc.cc.buffalo.edu (David) (02/07/90)
please unsubscribe me please. thanks.
ST502509@brownvm.brown.edu (Ronald C.F. Antony) (02/08/90)
Here a quote from comp.sys.next: ------------------------------------------------------------------------ For those who want to run fortran programs on NeXT, a copy of the fortran to c translator (f2c) has been uploaded to cs.orst.edu. It is currently in pub/next/submissions and should appear in pub/next/sources later. f2c, joinly developed by people from Bell Labs, Bellcore, and Carnegie Mellon, is free and has been under test by the net community for over six months. It has been verified on the NBS tests, several large math libraries, floating point tests, even code for laying cable on the ocean floor! ------------------------------------------------------------------------ That should help... Ronald