Nodes of different colours represent the following:
Solid arrows point from a procedure to one which it calls. Dashed
arrows point from an interface to procedures which implement that interface.
This could include the module procedures in a generic interface or the
implementation in a submodule of an interface in a parent module. Where possible, edges connecting nodes are given different colours to make them easier to distinguish in large graphs.
Nodes of different colours represent the following:
Solid arrows point from a procedure to one which it calls. Dashed
arrows point from an interface to procedures which implement that interface.
This could include the module procedures in a generic interface or the
implementation in a submodule of an interface in a parent module. Where possible, edges connecting nodes are given different colours to make them easier to distinguish in large graphs.
public pure module module subroutine assert(assertion, description)
Arguments
Type
Intent
Optional
Attributes
Name
logical,
intent(in)
::
assertion
character(len=*),
intent(in)
::
description
Description
Error terminate on .false. assertion with the stop code given by description
With IBM XL Fortran, the stop code is an integer due to character stop codes being unsupported.