https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=99819
Paul Thomas <pault at gcc dot gnu.org> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |pault at gcc dot gnu.org Assignee|unassigned at gcc dot gnu.org |pault at gcc dot gnu.org --- Comment #2 from Paul Thomas <pault at gcc dot gnu.org> --- Created attachment 50735 --> https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/attachment.cgi?id=50735&action=edit Experimenta "fix" for the PR The problem lies in class.c(gfc_build_class_symbol). The attachment contains two different experiments to test the hypothesis that the array_spec for 'y' is applied to the _data field of the derived type, which is then promoted to the main namespace. Subsequently, it is picked up in the declaration of 'z', which cause the problem. The first chunk, used by itself, turns the array_spec into a deferred array. The extent information is lost but the testcase now compiles and runs (incorrectly!). The second chunk, again by itself, puts the derived type representation in the function namespace. This now runs the testcase correctly and does the right thing. However, it can only encompass one such dummy. I'm onto it:-) Paul program p type t integer :: i end type class(t), allocatable :: dum1(:), dum2(:) allocate (t :: dum1(3), dum2(10)) dum2%i = [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10] print *, f(dum1, dum2), g(dum1) contains function g(z) class(*) :: z(:) type(t) :: u(size(z)) g = 0 end function f(x, y) class(t) :: x(:) class(*) :: y(size(x)) print *, size(y) select type (y) type is (t) f = 1 if (any (y%i .ne. [1,2,3])) print *, size(y%i) class default f = 0 end select end end