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Timeline for Syntax highlighting for Fortran?

Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0

17 events
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Jun 4, 2021 at 16:35 vote accept innoSPG
Dec 28, 2020 at 21:28 history edited Donald Duck CC BY-SA 4.0
added 11 characters in body
Oct 19, 2020 at 13:29 answer added kelvin timeline score: 7
Jul 4, 2020 at 3:20 comment added Vince W. fyi, we write fortran all the time, still very useful for HPC computing
Nov 24, 2019 at 6:30 comment added Mateen Ulhaq @jww I'm guessing you're noloader from the Github pull request. :P
Nov 24, 2019 at 6:13 comment added jww Still an issue in November, 2019; see How to solve “no reference to” error in gfortran Linux?
Nov 24, 2019 at 6:11 history edited jww CC BY-SA 4.0
Referenced code-prettify bug report and pull request. Removed argument that other languages have support, so Fortan should have it. It is a fallacious argument. Fortran should be supported on its own merits.
Oct 24, 2019 at 22:45 comment added Scientist @LukeDavis actually, only C and Fortran
Apr 16, 2019 at 23:40 comment added Luke Davis @JonH The academic, physical science community still relies on Fortran, because a powerful parallelization library for operation on supercomputers (MPI) only works with C++ and Fortran -- and the latter is much friendlier for scientific computing, where we care about ease of array manipulations more than the ability to make abstract classes. It is also blazingly fast, and is what powers numerical weather models (your weather forecasts) and climate models, as well as models in physics, chemistry, and bioinformatics (although these are not my field). Don't be too dismissive.
Mar 20, 2017 at 10:32 history edited CommunityBot
replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
Jan 22, 2016 at 21:11 comment added innoSPG @rene, my bad on non paying close attention to that note.
Jan 22, 2016 at 20:49 comment added rene In that post you linked it is explained that you can't ask SE for adding support, you have to ask the Google code-prettify project to add it first.
Jan 22, 2016 at 20:17 comment added innoSPG @JonH, the money think was just to kid. I actually use many other programming languages. And if it was the matter of money, I have enough experience to keep newcomer away. But I am also a teacher so I welcome and guide newcomers to replace me in the coming future.
Jan 22, 2016 at 20:14 comment added JonH True, but money isn't everything!
Jan 22, 2016 at 20:14 comment added innoSPG @JonH, well, fortran is still there and it will possibly stays there for a while. The popularity in some industry of capital importance keeps it alive. Fortran77 that follows the rules of punch cards is still the standards where old folks lead. However, there has been tremendous evolution in the fortran standard. fortran 90, 95, 2003 and 2008 have improved the language a lot. And the standard 2015 to be published adds other substantial improvements. Anyway, I get my paycheck from fortran, and the less people who use it, the more chances I have to keep my paycheck
Jan 22, 2016 at 19:59 comment added JonH Wow fortran is still around? I wonder if people still program punch cards?
Jan 22, 2016 at 19:13 history asked innoSPG CC BY-SA 3.0