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Fortran - Logical Operators
The following table shows all the logical operators supported by Fortran. Assume variable A holds .true. and variable B holds .false. , then −
Operator | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
.and. | Called Logical AND operator. If both the operands are non-zero, then condition becomes true. | (A .and. B) is false. |
.or. | Called Logical OR Operator. If any of the two operands is non-zero, then condition becomes true. | (A .or. B) is true. |
.not. | Called Logical NOT Operator. Use to reverses the logical state of its operand. If a condition is true then Logical NOT operator will make false. | !(A .and. B) is true. |
.eqv. | Called Logical EQUIVALENT Operator. Used to check equivalence of two logical values. | (A .eqv. B) is false. |
.neqv. | Called Logical NON-EQUIVALENT Operator. Used to check non-equivalence of two logical values. | (A .neqv. B) is true. |
Example
Try the following example to understand all the logical operators available in Fortran −
program logicalOp ! this program checks logical operators implicit none ! variable declaration logical :: a, b ! assigning values a = .true. b = .false. if (a .and. b) then print *, "Line 1 - Condition is true" else print *, "Line 1 - Condition is false" end if if (a .or. b) then print *, "Line 2 - Condition is true" else print *, "Line 2 - Condition is false" end if ! changing values a = .false. b = .true. if (.not.(a .and. b)) then print *, "Line 3 - Condition is true" else print *, "Line 3 - Condition is false" end if if (b .neqv. a) then print *, "Line 4 - Condition is true" else print *, "Line 4 - Condition is false" end if if (b .eqv. a) then print *, "Line 5 - Condition is true" else print *, "Line 5 - Condition is false" end if end program logicalOp
When you compile and execute the above program it produces the following result −
Line 1 - Condition is false Line 2 - Condition is true Line 3 - Condition is true Line 4 - Condition is true Line 5 - Condition is false
fortran_operators.htm
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