The extinction of legacy Fortran codes

Will do. I did not know I could edit it myself.

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You can also read that thread:

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Since many Fortran users are academics, I may tweet

Zenodo is a free site to store data, software and other artefacts in support of journal publications. It has the underlying materials for many computational academic papers

Not being an academic or having experience with Zenodo, a question I have is how you would use Zenodo and GitHub together. I guess working versions of a code are uploaded to GitHub and the version of a code and data underlying a published paper are uploaded to Zenodo?
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Apparently (never tried myself) , GitHub proposes to integrate seamlessly with Zenodo

You can also store your citation as a .cff file directly on GitHub

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From experience it can be very seamless. You login into zenodo, link your GitHub account, then you can select which repos you want to archive. Then in the future when you make a GitHub release, zenodo will pick up that release and archive it automatically for you. You can then also put a .zenodo.json file in the root of your repo to specify various meta data for zenodo to populate it’s record with.

Or you can just manually upload the code if your don’t want to link things (or it’s not on GitHub)

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I agree with @rfarmer - the link between Zenodo and GitHub is very seamless!