| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 224.1 | sounds strange | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed Feb 08 1989 08:20 | 6 | 
|  |     I think your customer is playing a joke on you.  I find it hard to
    believe that a MIL SPEC implementation of FORTRAN would be called
    anything but FORTRAN.  If you think your customer is serious, ask him
    what the MIL SPEC number is---all military specifications have
    reference numbers.
        John Sauter
 | 
| 224.2 | mil spec Fortran exists | KMOOSE::MCCUTCHEON | The Karate Moose | Wed Feb 08 1989 14:58 | 9 | 
|  | I don't remember the number, but this is a mil spec with extensions
for Fortran.  Things such as the DO WHILE and SAVE statements.  I helped
implement these things for TOPS-10/20 Fortran, and I believe they're in
VAX Fortran.
You may want to try the Fortran conference (sorry, don't know where it is,
I'd suspect TURRIS::).
Charlie
 | 
| 224.3 | Thank you. | JIT761::NAGAMORI | GSX-F rider | Thu Feb 09 1989 00:31 | 5 | 
|  | re.-1
    Thanks, I'll post the answer to FORTRAN conference.
/kn
 | 
| 224.4 | 1753 | TLE::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Sun Mar 05 1989 09:30 | 11 | 
|  | Re .2:
You're thinking of MIL-STD-1753 (or MIL-SPEC?).  It is a superset of Fortran-77.
(But you implemented SAVE statement support for F77, not 1753).
Fortran-10/20 conforms completely to the standard; the last I heard, VAX Fortran
was missing some minor features.  They'll quite be conversant on the issues in
the Fortran conference.  If "Mortran" relates to the standard, then it is either
slang, or a name for one vendor's implementation.
				/AHM
 | 
| 224.5 | Might be a pre-processor | ORACLE::RAMEY |  | Wed Mar 08 1989 17:57 | 8 | 
|  | We had a schematic capture tool at one time that I think was written in
mortran.  It was like Ratfor, a dialect of fortran that you ran through a
pre-processor which output vanilla fortran that you then compiled.  The
pre-processor translated all sorts of new features in mortran into normal
fortran.  I don't have any leads on mortran itself and I'm not sure anyone
is still here who would know anything. 
Del
 | 
| 224.6 | MORTRAN => overnight compilation | GIDDAY::GILLINGS | His Bach is worse than his Bytes | Wed May 17 1989 23:35 | 13 | 
|  |     MORTRAN is indeed a FORTRAN preprocessor. It works by recursive macro
    expansion and includes the usual extensions to FORTRAN-IV, like
    IF-THEN-ELSE, DO WHILE and CASE. It also gives the user access to
    the macro facility. Although I have never used the language, I have
    seen parts of the source code to Tektronix's PLOT-10/IGL which is
    written entirely in MORTRAN. Because the macro expansion is recursive
    compilation performance is appalling. I also found the code rather
    hard to understand, largely due to the syntax of the macros which
    seemed to always contain lots of #'s. Sorry I can't give you more
    information (like an example) but it's been a long time. Maybe
    if you asked someone from Tektronix?
    					John Gillings, Sydney CSC 
                                                              
 | 
| 224.7 |  | TLE::BRETT |  | Thu May 18 1989 22:40 | 3 | 
|  |     I even met an ex-user of it at DECUS this year !
    
    /Bevin
 | 
| 224.8 | I have sources - on paper tape!!! | STOAT::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - NAC Europe - REO2-G/J2 | Wed Nov 08 1989 11:56 | 5 | 
|  | If anyone is *really* interested I may try to find a whole bunch of paper
tapes I have at home somewhere containing the FORTRAN source code for a
(the?) MORTRAN pre-processor.
jb
 |