Check with a native before going into the jungle.
is the basic translator; it takes either a list
of file names or the standard input and writes
Fortran on the standard output.
as a continuation character in column 6
which causes Ratfor comments to be copied into
provides an interface to the
command which is much the same as
compiles the files specified by
Files with names ending in
are Ratfor source; other files are assumed to
described above are recognized, as are
-c compile only; don't load
-f save intermediate Fortran .f files
-r Ratfor only; implies -c and -f
-2 use big Fortran compiler (for large programs)
-U flag undeclared variables (not universally available)
Other flags are passed on to the loader.
is the bare translator, and is identical to the
version, except that the continuation convention
translates the Ratfor source on
collects the generated Fortran on file
for subsequent processing.
provides much the same services as
(within the limitations of
regrettably with a somewhat different syntax.
name Ratfor source or library, depending on type
h=/name make TSS H* file (runnable version); run as /name
r=/name update and use random library
a= compile as ascii (default is bcd)
C= copy comments into Fortran
f=name Fortran source file
Other options are as specified for the
command described in [4].
TSO, TSS, and other systems
check with the author for specifics.