ABS(A)
computes the absolute value of A
.
Fortran 77 and later, has overloads that are GNU extensions
Elemental function
RESULT = ABS(A)
A | The type of the argument shall be an INTEGER , REAL , or COMPLEX . |
The return value is of the same type and kind as the argument except the return value is REAL
for a COMPLEX
argument.
program test_abs integer :: i = -1 real :: x = -1.e0 complex :: z = (-1.e0,0.e0) i = abs(i) x = abs(x) x = abs(z) end program test_abs
Name | Argument | Return type | Standard |
ABS(A) |
REAL(4) A |
REAL(4) |
Fortran 77 and later |
CABS(A) |
COMPLEX(4) A |
REAL(4) |
Fortran 77 and later |
DABS(A) |
REAL(8) A |
REAL(8) |
Fortran 77 and later |
IABS(A) |
INTEGER(4) A |
INTEGER(4) |
Fortran 77 and later |
BABS(A) |
INTEGER(1) A |
INTEGER(1) |
GNU extension |
IIABS(A) |
INTEGER(2) A |
INTEGER(2) |
GNU extension |
JIABS(A) |
INTEGER(4) A |
INTEGER(4) |
GNU extension |
KIABS(A) |
INTEGER(8) A |
INTEGER(8) |
GNU extension |
ZABS(A) |
COMPLEX(8) A |
REAL(8) |
GNU extension |
CDABS(A) |
COMPLEX(8) A |
REAL(8) |
GNU extension |
© Free Software Foundation
Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3.
https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc-10.2.0/gfortran/ABS.html