I want to print the error numbers returned by the system calls (not the actual integers but the strings that they match to). The error numbers like EACCESS, ENOMEM, ENOENT etc ...
For eg:
>>>>This will print the error number in terms of integer. I want to get exactly the error code ( EACCESS, or ENOMEM ) etc ..
Thanks in Advance
Last edited by pludi; 10-07-2009 at 04:31 PM..
Reason: code tags, please...
Hi guys ...
i need ur help with some printing problem in unix ...
first prob. :
i wanna print from my NCR unix to an Win NT , Ip based printing server ( HP JetDirect ) .
My issue , is it possible to print directly to an Ip address from unix ?
How do i make it work to get any results ?... (3 Replies)
Suppose I have a script which is monitoring a directory
whenever a file drops in that directory,it sends alert
say I want to write a return code for the above script
which on successful execution of script gives a return value
Based on return code , I want to do initiate some jobs in other... (1 Reply)
Sorry for asking a very basic question.
How do i compile my c codes in UNIX.
That is how do i know whether any c compiler is there in my system?
If nothing is present where from do i get one and load into my system? (12 Replies)
Hi,
I know how to read a return code after executing a single command.
"echo $?". But I do not know how to sum the return code for a group of commands.
If I string 3 commands together and I do an echo $? all I get is the retunr code for the last command. Example below:
... (3 Replies)
Could someone please correctly tell the codes to use on Unix operating systems to produce the below diacritics:
A
Ā = Unicode Character 'LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH MACRON' (U+0100)
a
ā = Unicode Character 'LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH MACRON' (U+0101)
D
Ḍ = Unicode Character... (1 Reply)
Hi,
We have a Unix 3.2v5.0.5.
I installed a printer via scoadmin, HP network printer manager with network peripheral name (hostname and ipadres are in /etc/hosts).
This is the configuration file :
Code:
root@sco1 # cat configurationBanner: on:AlwaysContent types: simpleDevice:... (0 Replies)
I ported application from SysV to Linux and run into troubles with printing.
Application uses lp and HP JetDirect-based printers, it inserts HP control codes in the file and uses plain lp -d dest doc-file command to print it.
The Linux (Ubuntu 8) has CUPS system, which I am not familiar... (0 Replies)
Solaris 10:
Having some trouble with a new printer printing control codes. This is an HP MFP M632.
Tried a few ppd files and without a ppd file using commands similar to the follow:
lpadmin -p L4102A -v /dev/null -m netstandard -n... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
We have a HTML source which will be processed using a informatica workflow. In between these two we have a Unix script which transforms the file.
We are getting an error from past week in the informatica saying invalid format, because the file has unused html reference (0-8,14-31 etc)... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: karthik adiga
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
strord
strord(3C)strord(3C)NAME
strord - convert string data order
SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION
The text orientation (mode) of a file can be right-to-left (non-Latin) or left-to-right (Latin). This text orientation can affect the way
data is arranged in the file. The data arrangements that result are called screen order and keyboard order.
converts the order of characters in s2 from screen to keyboard order or vice versa and places the result in s1. The arguments s1 and s2
point to strings (arrays of characters terminated by a null character). returns s1.
performs the conversion based on mode information indicated by the argument m. The argument m is of type nl_mode found in the header file
The mode argument can have two possible values: and
If the mode argument is the text orientation is left-to-right, and all non-Latin sub-strings are reversed. Non-Latin sub-strings are any
number of contiguous right-to-left language characters. Non-Latin sub-strings are delimited by ASCII characters.
Similarly, if the mode argument is the text orientation is right-to-left and all Latin sub-strings are reversed. Latin sub-strings are any
number of contiguous printable ASCII characters. Latin sub-strings are delimited by right-to-left language characters and ASCII control
codes.
Some right-to-left languages have a duplicate set of digits called alternative numbers. Alternative numbers always have a left-to-right
orientation.
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Locale
The category determines whether a right-to-left language has alternative numbers.
International Code Set Support
Single-byte character code sets are supported.
WARNINGS
does not check for overflow of the array pointed to by s1.
Obsolescent Interfaces
is to be obsoleted at a future date.
AUTHOR
was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO forder(1), nljust(1), setlocale(3C), environ(5), thread_safety(5).
TO BE OBSOLETED strord(3C)