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    Use of Python Script plugin to work with FORTRAN project

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    • Arjan van DijkA
      Arjan van Dijk @Alan Kilborn
      last edited by

      @Alan-Kilborn
      The construction with the clipboard “does something”, but not completely what I want. To start, I just tried to call gfortran for the set of files listed on the clipboard, without any other option, not even the name of the executable, as there is always a default name. The NppExec line with the call to the compiler seems to get correct instructions from the clipboard, as the console tells me:

      gfortran libxmath.f90 libutil.f90 libdate.f90 libexponential.f90 libinterval.f90 libtest.f90 test.f90

      Process started (PID=7852) >>>
      gfortran: error: test.f90
      : Invalid argument
      <<< Process finished (PID=7852). (Exit code 1)
      ================ READY ================

      But test.f90 is just a normal source file. When I run the same command from MINGW/MSYS, gfortran has no problems and produces a nice executable. How to proceed?

      Arjan van DijkA Alan KilbornA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • Arjan van DijkA
        Arjan van Dijk @Arjan van Dijk
        last edited by

        Two decades ago, I wrote a set of macro’s that turned NEdit into a full IDE. And then they changed the macro language…

        Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Alan KilbornA
          Alan Kilborn @Arjan van Dijk
          last edited by

          @Arjan-van-Dijk said in Use of Python Script plugin to work with FORTRAN project:

          Two decades ago, I wrote a set of macro’s that turned NEdit into a full IDE. And then they changed the macro language…

          Relevance to the subject at hand?

          Arjan van DijkA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Alan KilbornA
            Alan Kilborn @Arjan van Dijk
            last edited by

            @Arjan-van-Dijk said in Use of Python Script plugin to work with FORTRAN project:

            gfortran libxmath.f90 libutil.f90 libdate.f90 libexponential.f90 libinterval.f90 libtest.f90 test.f90
            gfortran: error: test.f90
            : Invalid argument
            But test.f90 is just a normal source file. When I run the same command from MINGW/MSYS, gfortran has no problems and produces a nice executable.

            How to proceed?

            Well, unknown, at least by me. Maybe someone else…
            Often such things are solved by continued experimentation by the one that has the specific tools that are giving trouble, i.e., you. :-)
            But I realize that you may only want to put a certain amount of effort in.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Arjan van DijkA
              Arjan van Dijk @Alan Kilborn
              last edited by

              @Alan-Kilborn: Just to demonstrate my level of ambition with this project. And therefore maybe boost your willingness to help.

              Alan KilbornA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
              • Alan KilbornA
                Alan Kilborn @Arjan van Dijk
                last edited by

                @Arjan-van-Dijk said in Use of Python Script plugin to work with FORTRAN project:

                Just to demonstrate my level of ambition with this project

                Well, it sounds like you have it. :-)

                And therefore maybe boost your willingness to help.

                It’s not about willingness; it is about ability, of which I’m tapped out on. :-(

                Arjan van DijkA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Arjan van DijkA
                  Arjan van Dijk @Alan Kilborn
                  last edited by

                  @Alan-Kilborn
                  Thanks for helping me so far, the system at least does something now. I hope now some other expert steps in.

                  PeterJonesP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • PeterJonesP
                    PeterJones @Arjan van Dijk
                    last edited by

                    @Arjan-van-Dijk

                    Is there a way to just write and load/edit/save your own set of scripts directly, instead of copy/pasting them from an Npp text file into a menu window in Plugins > NppExec > Execute NppExec Scripts?

                    You paste them in there once, and then hit Save…, and now NppExec has saved the script.

                    Or you edit %AppData%\Notepad++\plugins\config\npes_saved.txt (which is where NppExec stores its saved scripts), and put the scripts in there. The name of each script is on the :: lines, so the script I showed you above is in npes_saved.txt as

                    ::gcc-CompileAndRun
                    NPP_SAVE
                    cd "$(CURRENT_DIRECTORY)"
                    gcc -o "$(NAME_PART)" "$(FILE_NAME)"
                    $(NAME_PART)
                    

                    After editing npes_saved.txt manually, you will have to restart Notepad++ to get NppExec to see those scripts.

                    Once you have the scripts in NppExec, if you don’t want to have to go select from the pulldown, you can use Plugins > NppExec > Advanced Options… to put individual scripts into the Macro menu. And once it’s in the Macro menu (and Notepad++ is restarted), you can use Settings > Shortcut Mapper to assign a keyboard shortcut to the script.

                    It seems as if NppExec does not like the construction with the reverse primes

                    Neither does cmd.exe. The “reverse primes” aka “backticks” aka “grave-accents” are a linux thing. I didn’t think they ever worked like that in the Windows environment: I’ve never had them work like that in cmd.exe, and I don’t use powershell enough to know whether they work there or not. Oh, right, you’ve mentioned MINGW/MSYS – Please understand that NppExec isn’t running in your MINGW/MSYS environment; it’s running in something much closer to cmd.exe. So you won’t get all the MINGW/MSYS magic automatically inside NppExec.

                    It seems as if NppExec does not like the construction with the reverse primes

                    As @Alan-Kilborn later said, it might end up in a different directory. There is a reason that nearly every one of my NppExec scripts has cd "$(CURRENT_DIRECTORY)" as one of the first couple lines… because I always want NppExec running relative to the file’s directory, not whatever directory it happens to start in (the notepad++.exe’s directory, or whatever directory the last script happened to leave me in).

                    gfortran tempfile thinks that it has to compile tempfile as if it were a source file and not that it contains a list of source filenames…

                    Does the gfortran executable have a command line option for “get the list of source names out of a file”? Many such commands do have that, and that would be the easiest method

                    But test.f90 is just a normal source file. When I run the same command from MINGW/MSYS, gfortran has no problems and produces a nice executable. How to proceed?

                    You need to figure out the exact sequence of events necessary to run your gfortran command from cmd.exe. Once you figure that out, using that series of commands in NppExec will usually work. Or, if you write a MINGW/MSYS-compatible script file or makefile, and have NppExec call that script or makefile using an appropriate command that launches the MINGW/MSYS environment. (I am not a MINGW/MSYS user, but I believe that they have a bash.exe or similar environment, IIRC. If so, then something like bash.exe fortran-bash-script.sh could be used to call it, or bash make myFortranProjectTargetName or whatever the right syntax is.)

                    Also, just to confirm: are all of those .f90 files mentioned in the same directory?

                    cmd /c getdeps.exe myprogram.f90 | clip
                    gfortran $(CLIPBOARD_TEXT)

                    It would very much surprise me if there wasn’t a slightly more elegant way of getting the output. @Michael-Vincent is more of an expert in using the details of NppExec than I am, so maybe he’ll have a chance to chime in.

                    Michael VincentM Alan KilbornA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                    • Michael VincentM
                      Michael Vincent @PeterJones
                      last edited by

                      @PeterJones said in Use of Python Script plugin to work with FORTRAN project:

                      @Michael-Vincent is more of an expert in using the details of NppExec than I am, so maybe he’ll have a chance to chime in.

                      I think between you and @Alan-Kilborn , you got it covered. If I can’t get it work in NppExec, I try to make a Windows Batch file (.bat) do it. If I can get it to run in a batch file, I use NppExec to call the batch file with appropriate command line arguments and then do the Macro menu thing.

                      For example, I have a Macro menu from NppExec called “Compile” and it “compiles” whatever is in Notepad++, be it Perl (perl -c), Python (pylint), C/C++ (msbuild or gcc depending on if there is a Makefile or .vcxproj or .sln file in an assigned project directory set as an NppExec global variable), JSON (jq), Yang, (pyang), YAML (yamllint -d relaxed), docker-compose… you get the picture. It got way to complicated to create all that logic in NppExec, so this is the NppExec “command”:

                      ::compile
                      NPP_CONSOLE on
                      NPE_CONSOLE -- x+
                      NPP_SAVE
                      cd "$(CURRENT_DIRECTORY)"
                      IF "$(ARGC)"<="1" THEN
                          NPP_EXEC project check
                      ENDIF
                      "$(NPP_DIRECTORY)\plugins\NppExtTasks\NppExtTasks.bat" compile "$(FULL_CURRENT_PATH)"
                      NPE_CONSOLE -- x-
                      

                      And the NppExtTasks.bat file does all the magic!

                      Cheers.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Alan KilbornA
                        Alan Kilborn @PeterJones
                        last edited by

                        @PeterJones said

                        You (Arjan-van-Dijk) need to figure out the exact sequence of events necessary to run your gfortran command from cmd.exe.

                        I think this is the absolute key point. Nobody can really help with that, because nobody has this same toolchain.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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