First step is just to take a quick peek at what the DLL exports, dumpbin (MSVC) will do that.
dll’s public symbols … As per the comments, I did not specify fftw3. In particular the /DIRECTIVES option will show the linker directives in the object file: $ dumpbin/directives strutil. DUMPBIN is being shipped within Common Tools for Visual C++, so be sure to select this feature in the process of installation of Visual Studio. You can use this statement as an alternative to using the VRF import and. So if, for example, you would like to be notified by mail when Steve posts an update to his blog (or of any other specific activity anywhere else), you need to tell the system. To do so, simply type in the following command: cd c:\windows\SysWOW64 Using the ‘dumpbin’ utility (See Microsoft dumpbin’s help page) under windows, we can have a look at this in action. close() However, undocumented options do exist and some of the documented options are arguably not documented well-indeed, are documented misleadingly. to actually have a minimum version (see bug 209579 ) 2. For each module found, it lists all the functions that are exported by that module, and which of those functions are actually being called by other modules.
#VISUAL STUDIO FORTRAN COMPILER OPTIONS .DLL#
dll Take a look at the names of the functions which are exported.