Oh My God she is back with her FORTRAN thing again …
Why does she keep showing us how to do this and that in FORTRAN …
Why can’t she do R and Python just like everybody else …
Don’t get me wrong I do code in R and Python most of the time. It’s just I figured out there must be at least tens of people on this planet who will wonder someday, just like I did last month : “How do I generate a nice LaTeX PDF report with FORTRAN code in it ?”.
Well, I suppose you run Fortran on Linux.
Step 1: Write the .tex file
\documentclass{article} \usepackage[T1]{fontenc} \usepackage{xcolor} \usepackage{lmodern} \usepackage{listings} \usepackage[margin=1.0in]{geometry} \definecolor{mygreen}{rgb}{0,0.6,0} \definecolor{mygray}{rgb}{0.5,0.5,0.5} \definecolor{mymauve}{rgb}{0.58,0,0.82} \lstset{ basicstyle=\footnotesize, % the size of the fonts that are used for the code breakatwhitespace=false, % sets if automatic breaks should only happen at whitespace breaklines=false, % sets automatic line breaking captionpos=b, % sets the caption-position to bottom commentstyle=\color{mygreen}, % comment style extendedchars=true, % lets you use non-ASCII characters; for 8-bits encodings only, does not work with UTF-8 keepspaces=true, % keeps spaces in text, useful for keeping indentation of code (possibly needs columns=flexible) keywordstyle=\color{blue}, % keyword style language=[95]Fortran, % the language of the code numbers=left, % where to put the line-numbers; possible values are (none, left, right) numbersep=5pt, % how far the line-numbers are from the code numberstyle=\tiny\color{mygray}, % the style that is used for the line-numbers rulecolor=\color{black}, % if not set, the frame-color may be changed on line-breaks within not-black text (e.g. comments (green here)) showspaces=false, % show spaces everywhere adding particular underscores; it overrides 'showstringspaces' showstringspaces=false, % underline spaces within strings only showtabs=false, % show tabs within strings adding particular underscores stepnumber=1, % the step between two line-numbers. If it's 1, each line will be numbered stringstyle=\color{mymauve}, % string literal style tabsize=4, % sets default tabsize to 2 spaces title=\lstname % show the filename of files } \begin{document} Here is how one can easily insert other programming langages (like Fortran) in LaTex. \begin{lstlisting} subroutine mySubroutine() write (*,*) "Hello" end subroutine program main implicit none call mySubroutine() end program main \end{lstlisting} \end{document}
The rules inside \lstset {} will configure your syntax highlighting. You may change them according to your own taste.
I also mentioned that language=[95]Fortran, but you may also write language=[70]Fortran if you like it more old school.
Then save your file as, say, “example.tex”.
Step 2: Install the necessary packages
>>> sudo apt-get install texlive-full
Step 3 : Generate the pdf
>>> pdflatex ./example.tex
Step 4 : Open the pdf
You are welcome 🙂