I installed the Intel Fortran Composer XE from on my Debian Linux system, which includes the Intel Fortran Compiler. I installed it to opt/intel/composerxe2013sp1.0.080, but now I'm not sure how to run it. I followed the instructions in to install the environment variables, but now I'm trying to run the IDE.Does Intel Fortran on Linux not come with an IDE? On Windows everyone talks about integrating it with Visual Studio, so do I need to integrate it with Eclipse (somehow?), or what? Can someone point me to resources telling me about this?
I don't see information anywhere, so I feel like. I'm just supposed to know and that this is a really stupid question. What is the composer if not an IDE?
Is the composer different from the compiler? You need to source two files into your environment (and possibly specify your architecture) source /opt/intel/composerxe2013sp1.0.080/bin/compilervars.sh intel64source /opt/intel/composerxe2013sp1.0.080/bin/compilervarsarch.sh intel64To find out what architectures are supported run /opt/intel/composerxe2013sp1.0.080/bin/compilervars.shwithout any argumentsYou can create a file named /etc/profile.d/intel.sh, and insert these lines into it. After editing you should log out and log in back again, then try which iccwhich ifortecho $LDLIBRARYPATHTo see if your environment knows the correct location of everythingIf you cannot edit files under /etc (no super user privileges), just add these two 'source' lines into your /.bashrc, then log out and log in again.
安装 Intel Compiler (ifort & icc & icpc) MentalFlow. 2018.10.27 17:37. 字数 1834. 578MB Intel C Compiler Intel(R) Fortran Compiler 17.0 Update 7 595MB Intel Fortran Compiler Intel(R) Math Kernel Library 2017 Update 4 for C/C 3.2GB Intel MKL core libraries for C/C Intel(R) Xeon Phi(TM) coprocessor support for C/C Cluster support. Intel Fortran Compiler (for macOS.) This compiler works with your development environment: Build from a command line or use Xcode. integration; Access 64-bit compilers.
Invoking Intel® Fortran Compiler Invoking the Intel®Fortran CompilerThe command to invoke the compiler is ifort.Requirements Before Using the Command LineOn Linux. and Mac OS. systems, you need to set some environment variablesto specify locations for the various components prior to using the commandline.
The Intel Fortran Compiler installation includes a.bat file thatyou can run to set environment variables. For more information, see.On Windows. systems, you typically do not need to set any environmentvariables prior to using the command line. Each of the Intel®Fortran Compiler variations has its own Intel Compiler command-line window,available from the Intel Fortran program folder. This window has the appropriateenvironment variables already set for the command-line environment. Using the ifort Command from the Command LineUse the ifort command either on a command lineor in a makefile to invoke the Intel Fortran compiler. The syntax is:ifort options inputfile(s)For a complete listing of compiler options, see the reference.You can specify more than one inputfile,using a space as a delimiter.
See.For more information on ifort syntax, see. NoteFor Windows and Mac OS. systems, you can also use the compilerfrom within the integrated development environment.You can use the command-line window to invoke the Intel Fortran Compilerin a number of ways, detailed below. Using makefiles from the Command LineUse makefiles to specify a number of files with various paths and tosave this information for multiple compilations. For more informationon using makefiles, see.
Using the devenv command from the Command Line (Windows only)Use devenv to set various options for the integrateddevelopment environment (IDE) as well as build, clean, and debug projectsfrom the command line. For more information on the devenvcommand, see the devenv description in the Microsoft.Visual Studio.
documentation. Using a.bat file from the Command LineUse a.bat file to consistently execute the compiler with a desiredset of options. This spares you retyping the command each time you needto recompile.