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I've seen this asked for other languages, but having just found out how nicely Fortran can handle arrays, I thought there might be an easy way to do this without loops.

Currently I'm searching over a 3D array looking at 'nearest neighbours' to see if they contain the letter 'n', and whenever it finds this value, I want it to perform some clusterLabel assignment (which isn't relevant for this question)

I wanted to use if(lastNeighArray.eq."n") then...<rest of code> but for obvious reasons it doesn't like checking an array against a value. Neither does it like me using lastNeighArray(:), even though I'd like it to check each of the elements one at a time. where(lastNeighArray.eq."n") doesn't work as I have a case statement inside the where loop and I get the error WHERE statements and constructs must not be nested.

So I'm a little stuck. What I really want is something like when(lastNeighArray.eq."n") but that doesn't exist.

I've also looked at any and forall but they don't seem like the right choice.

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  • 5
    It's strange that you looked at ANY but didn't like it.
    – user649198
    Commented Jan 8, 2014 at 3:09
  • 1
    @Svetlana I don't think at the time I considered it fully. With two year experience I don't think I would have dismissed it so easily. Commented Jan 8, 2014 at 8:18

1 Answer 1

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ANY should actually be the right choice

if ( ANY( lastNeighArray=="n" ) ) then

there is also ALL if you wanted the whole array to contain that value.

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