FDATE(DATE) returns the current date (using the same format as CTIME) in DATE. It is equivalent to CALL CTIME(DATE,
TIME()).
This intrinsic is provided in both subroutine and function forms; however, only one form can be used in any given program unit.
GNU extension
Subroutine, function
CALL FDATE(DATE). |
DATE = FDATE(). |
| DATE | The type shall be of type CHARACTER of the default kind. It is an INTENT(OUT) argument. If the length of this variable is too short for the date and time string to fit completely, it will be blank on procedure return. |
The current date and time as a string.
program test_fdate
integer(8) :: i, j
character(len=30) :: date
call fdate(date)
print *, 'Program started on ', date
do i = 1, 100000000 ! Just a delay
j = i * i - i
end do
call fdate(date)
print *, 'Program ended on ', date
end program test_fdate
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Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-7.2.0/gfortran/FDATE.html