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[EN] Hello Fortran!
Despite the fact that Fortran has been around since the 1950s, it remains a very relevant programming language today and has an active community of keen engineers. In this episode I'll take a sweep from the origins of Fortran, how to deal with legacy (Fortran 77), how the language evolved to modern day use cases of Fortran. In the course of the episode you'll hear from Thomas Clune (NASA, US), Wim Vanderbauwhede (Uni. Glasgow, UK), Milan Curcic (Uni. of Miami, US) and Ondrej Certik (GSI Technologies, US). <br/><br/>Fortran-lang website: https://fortran-lang.orgFortran-lang GitHub: https://github.com/fortran-langLFortran website: https://lfortran.orgLFortran GitHub: https://github.com/lfortran/lfortranMilan's book: https://www.manning.com/books/....modern-fortranNeural https://github.com/modern-fort....ran/neural-fortranFa https://github.com/certik/fastgptUS Fortran Standard Committee: https://j3-fortran.org/Ondrej's website: https://ondrejcertik.com/Milan's website: https://milancurcic.com/Tom Clune's site at NASA: https://sciences.gsfc.nasa.gov/sed/bio/thomas.l.clune Wim Vanderbauwhede's site at Uni Glasgow https://www.dcs.gla.ac.uk/~wim/pFUnit testing framework https://github.com/Goddard-Fortran-Ecosystem/pFUnit gFTL template library: https://software.nasa.gov/software/GSC-17742-1 Wim's paper (Journal of Supercomputing 2021): Making legacy Fortran code type safe through automated program transformation https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11227-021-03839-9 <br/><br/>Support the showThank you for listening and your ongoing support. It means the world to us! <br/>You can also support our efforts by leaving a rating or review.<br/>Follow or contact us on Email mailto:code4thought@proton.me Patreon https://www.patreon.com/codeforthought Slack (ukrse.slack.com): @code4thought Mastadon: @code4thought@fosstodon.org LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pweschmidt/ This podcast is licensed under the Creative Commons Licence: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/<br/><br/>