Nodes of different colours represent the following:
Solid arrows point from a procedure to one which it calls. Dashed arrows point from an interface to procedures which implement that interface. This could include the module procedures in a generic interface or the implementation in a submodule of an interface in a parent module. Where possible, edges connecting nodes are given different colours to make them easier to distinguish in large graphs.
Nodes of different colours represent the following:
Solid arrows point from a procedure to one which it calls. Dashed arrows point from an interface to procedures which implement that interface. This could include the module procedures in a generic interface or the implementation in a submodule of an interface in a parent module. Where possible, edges connecting nodes are given different colours to make them easier to distinguish in large graphs.
SUBROUTINE InitializeZoneGroupTable
! SUBROUTINE INFORMATION:
! AUTHOR Greg Stark
! DATE WRITTEN July 2008
! MODIFIED January 2010, Kyle Benne
! Name cleanup
! RE-ENGINEERED na
! PURPOSE OF THIS SUBROUTINE:
! This subroutine initializes the zone group SQL tables
! METHODOLOGY EMPLOYED:
! Standard SQL92 queries and commands via the Fortran SQLite3 API
! REFERENCES:
! na
! USE STATEMENTS:
! na
IMPLICIT NONE ! Enforce explicit typing of all variables in this routine
! SUBROUTINE ARGUMENT DEFINITIONS:
! na
! SUBROUTINE PARAMETER DEFINITIONS:
! na
! INTERFACE BLOCK SPECIFICATIONS:
! na
! DERIVED TYPE DEFINITIONS:
! na
! SUBROUTINE LOCAL VARIABLE DECLARATIONS:
INTEGER :: result
result = SQLiteExecuteCommandMacro( &
'CREATE TABLE ZoneGroups (ZoneGroupIndex INTEGER PRIMARY KEY, ZoneListName TEXT, ZoneListMultiplier INTEGER);')
result = SQLitePrepareStatementMacro(ZoneGroupInsertStmt, 'INSERT INTO ZoneGroups VALUES(?,?,?);')
END SUBROUTINE InitializeZoneGroupTable