FORTRAN (the correct spelling), aka FORMULA TRANSLATION, is a language that has been around for many years. It originally was card punched and had peculiar characteristics due to that (with regard to continuing lines, etc.). These days, Fortran 95 (*) and newer editions work on all sorts of computers (Fortran 2003 is the new standard, with object oriented features). FORTRAN tends to be used for number crunching, modeling, etc. and has many libraries to provide support for such things. see http://www.faqs.org/faqs/fortran-faq/ for more info. (*) (Slightly pedantic note by [AM]) Up to and including the FORTRAN 77 standard the name was written in capitals. Since the Fortran 90 standard the name is written with a capitalised initial. Fortran programmers tended to be Real Programmers: http://www.pbm.com/~lindahl/real.programmers.html ---- How does a FORTRAN application gain a [GUI]? The best-known commercial solution is Winteracter [http://www.winteracter.com]. Many of us, though, find [managing Fortran programs] with [Tk] more satisfying. [AM] See also: [Combining Fortran and Tcl in one program] for another solution ---- [Gustav Ivanovic] See also [calling Fortran routines in a DLL] ---- Last but not least, FORTRAN/TK is actually a real and quite comfortable cross-platform (OS/2 Warp and Windows 9x/NT) Tk-wrapper for Open Watcom FORTRAN 77: http://svn.netlabs.org/fortrantk [AM] (18 may 2009) Here is an updated link: http://programmingtools.rosihanari.net/fortran-tools/fortrantk-a-free-fortran-compiler.php ---- * [Tutorials for the Tcl/Tk newbie on interacting with Fortran applications that expect input/output from the user] * [Extending Tcl with Fortran] * [Plasma Surface Interaction Codes] ---- !!!!!! %|[Category Language]|[Category FORTRAN]|% !!!!!!