Converting Fortran to MATLAB

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Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 16 de Nov. de 2013
Comentada: Ben Barrowes el 2 de Dic. de 2013
Greetings, all
I have found a powerful yet compact Fortran code which I am trying to reprogram into MATLAB. Unfortunately, I have now hit a point where I need some help with the logic. The algorithms are easy enough to convert, so I'm not going to show them (unless you really want me to).
My problem is converting the Fortran "GOTO" logic into MATLAB. I have decided to study the sequence in which things happen, and from this created a map of triggers (e.g. if...goto 23 (else) goto 13) and I need to design my loops and functions around these. Some are simple enough (those in the green frames), but one of them (red frame) really has me baffled...
The nested loop between 15 and 19 is just three "for" loops, which are easily coded but less easily illustrated here. They are terminated by 16, 17 and 18 repectively.
From 28 on the calculations are done and some sequential post-processing takes place.
Thanks in advance

Respuesta aceptada

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 16 de Nov. de 2013
Use "continue" to resume back at point #13. Continue ends the current iteration of the enclosing loop and starts the next iteration.
Matters would be slightly more complicated if you needed to break out of the nested loops and go back to #13, but you do not need to do that so don't worry about it ;-)
  1 comentario
Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 19 de Nov. de 2013
Thanks.
This is new to me, but I'll try that.

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Más respuestas (5)

Ben Barrowes
Ben Barrowes el 17 de Nov. de 2013
Have you tried the free spag (linux version) from Polyhedron software to clean up (refactor) some of these goto's for you? http://www.polyhedron.com/spag0html
If this doesn't refactor all of your goto's, at least it will get rid of many of them, often 50-75% of them. Spag also declares variables and prettifies the code to some extent so that the conversion to matlab becomes simpler.
If there are goto's left over, you can check out my goto remover (not ready for public consumption, so as yet unpublished) which removes all the remaining goto's using while/break/continue's: http://engineering.dartmouth.edu/~d30574x/consulting/consulting_gotorefactor.html
I would be happy to run your code through this and send it back to you.
Finally, you might try f2matlab at the file exchange to automatically convert the goto-less f90 style code to m-code: http://www.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/5260-f2matlab
f2matlab usually gets you 90-100% towards a working matlab code. You will have to test and debug the resulting code, though.
Good luck!
  1 comentario
Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 20 de Nov. de 2013
Thanks, I've finally run enough of it through SPAG to navigate myself through.
I've attached the SPAG result as a text file, starting at line 102.

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Sean de Wolski
Sean de Wolski el 18 de Nov. de 2013
Gerrit,
You might be able to avoid reinventing the wheel by using the MEX api. This will let you compile your fortran code yuo have in a format that MATLAB can use.
Then you can just call this rather than rewriting it.
  1 comentario
Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 19 de Nov. de 2013
I have to rewrite it eventually, because I need more control over the inputs.
Thanks, though.

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Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 18 de Nov. de 2013
Greetings, Ben
I tried SPAG, but it seems that, even after getting rid of the comments and the excess, operations 13 to 28 are too many lines to handle. I'll have to buy the package, but not at that price.
Thanks, though.
  1 comentario
Ben Barrowes
Ben Barrowes el 2 de Dic. de 2013
The evaluation version of spag is free and can handle any number of lines. It will get rid of goto's, but will not change over to f90 format. You might try that version:
They have windows, linux, and Mac evaluation versions.

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Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 18 de Nov. de 2013
Greetings, Walter
Colour me crazy, but doesn't "continue", erm, do nothing...? (In Matlab as it is in Fortran).
  2 comentarios
James Tursa
James Tursa el 18 de Nov. de 2013
CONTINUE does not have the same meaning in MATLAB and Fortran:
Do nothing:
MATLAB: ;
Fortran: continue
Skip the rest of the current iteration and go to next iteration:
MATLAB: continue
Fortran: cycle
Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 19 de Nov. de 2013
Thanks for that explanation, your answer has led me to this curious graphic illustration:
I think I'll try this then.

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Gerrit Grundling
Gerrit Grundling el 25 de Nov. de 2013
Editada: Gerrit Grundling el 25 de Nov. de 2013
I have had a moment of inspiration, and decided to rearrange the sequence: instead of going back halfway, it skips steps towards the end. Then I could just use a while loop.
Some other posts on this forum have led me to believe that "continue" is a dangerous tool.
Regards
  1 comentario
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson el 25 de Nov. de 2013
"continue" isn't any more dangerous than "break" in MATLAB. The only thing you need to watch out for is if you are in nested loops and want the "continue" to go right out of the inner loop and to the next iteration of the outer loop.

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