![]() Open "Compilers" -> Intel Fortran Compiler Classic and Intel(R) Fortran Compilers as shown. You can also use the left-side navigation. Due to our build system automation we use the same LLVM-based version name for the packaging of all 3 OSes, hence the macOS download package carries the LLVM-based version name in the name of the package. Hence, you may expect the Versions and package names of the downloads to be those of Classic for macOS, but this is not so. For macOS only the Classic Compilers are provided. This is especially confusing for macOS users - the Intel Compilers for macOS are the Classic Compilers, not the LLVM-based compilers. Furthermore, the version is the version of the LLVM-based compilers and not the Classic Compilers. You will notice that the "Version" column for the downloads is the COMPILER version, not the oneAPI version. Keep searching or scrolling until you find the heading "Intel® Fortran Compiler Classic and Intel® Fortran Compiler", a description paragraph, and a table with downloads for "Intel(R) Fortran Compiler Classic and Intel Fortran Compiler for ". The first hits from your search for "Fortran" will be for the RUNTIME packages. ![]() You can ignore all of this and scroll roughly 1/3 down the page, or search within this page for "Fortran". When you open this page you will notice the top of the page attempts to direct you to Toolkit downloads, package managers and repos, and Runtimes. The Component and Runtime downloads page is HERE A component package is a single "product" or "component" from Intel Developer Tools, such as "Intel Fortran Compiler", or "Intel Math Kernel Library", or the "Intel(R) Vtune(TM) Profiler". The easiest method is to use the "Standalone" or "Single Component" Downloads. In this article I will explain Component Downloads to do just that - to get Intel Fortran installed without downloading the wrong package or wasting bandwidth downloading an enormous Toolkit package.īut before we start - make sure you have a supported platform and have all prerequisites and read our System Requirements. How do I get just Fortran with oneAPI packages?" Many long-time IFORT users asked and are still asking "I just want the Intel Fortran Compiler. When Intel moved from Intel(R) Parallel Studio XE products to Intel(R) oneAPI many customers were confused by the new Toolkits and packaging.
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