VMS Help PASCAL, Declaration Section, Routine Declaration, directive *Conan The Librarian (sorry for the slow response - running on an old VAX) |
A directive is the alternative to a block in a routine declaration. A directive provides the compiler with information about either a routine whose heading is declared separately from its body (indicated by the FORWARD directive) or a routine that is external to the Pascal program (indicated by the EXTERNAL, EXTERN or FORTRAN directives). To specify a directive, include it immediately after the routine heading and follow it with a semicolon. The following describes the two classes of directives. o The FORWARD directive indicates a routine whose block is specified in a subsequent part of the same procedure and function section, allowing you to call a routine before you specify its routine body. As an extension, Compaq Pascal will allow the body to be in a different declaration part. If the body and heading are specified in different procedure and function sections, a FORWARD declared function should not be used as an actual discriminant to a schema type. When you specify the body of the routine in subsequent code, include only the FUNCTION or PROCEDURE predeclared identifier, the routine-identifier, and the body of the routine. Do not repeat the formal-parameter, the attribute-list, or the result-type-id. o The EXTERNAL, EXTERN and FORTRAN directives indicate that a routine is external to a Pascal program. They are used to declare independently compiled Pascal routines written in other languages. For portability reasons, the FORTRAN directive should only be used for external routines written in FORTRAN.
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