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Full Discussion: C terminal commands
Top Forums Programming C terminal commands Post 302759071 by Corona688 on Monday 21st of January 2013 10:45:40 AM
Old 01-21-2013
You open the file with fopen("filename", "r"), and read lines with fgets(buf, sizeof(buf), fp); and scan until you get the lines you want, and print them.

What have you tried?
 

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STRCAT(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						 STRCAT(3)

NAME
strcat, strncat -- concatenate strings LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <string.h> char * strcat(char * restrict s, const char * restrict append); char * strncat(char * restrict s, const char * restrict append, size_t count); DESCRIPTION
The strcat() and strncat() functions append a copy of the nul-terminated string append to the end of the nul-terminated string s, then add a terminating ''. The string s must have sufficient space to hold the result. The strncat() function appends not more than count characters where space for the terminating '' should not be included in count. RETURN VALUES
The strcat() and strncat() functions return the pointer s. EXAMPLES
The following appends ``abc'' to ``chararray'': char *letters = "abcdefghi"; (void)strncat(chararray, letters, 3); The following example shows how to use strncat() safely in conjunction with strncpy(3). char buf[BUFSIZ]; char *input, *suffix; (void)strncpy(buf, input, sizeof(buf) - 1); buf[sizeof(buf) - 1] = ''; (void)strncat(buf, suffix, sizeof(buf) - 1 - strlen(buf)); The above will copy as many characters from ``input'' to ``buf'' as will fit. It then appends as many characters from suffix as will fit (or none if there is no space). For operations like this, the strlcpy(3) and strlcat(3) functions are a better choice, as shown below. (void)strlcpy(buf, input, sizeof(buf)); (void)strlcat(buf, suffix, sizeof(buf)); SEE ALSO
bcopy(3), memccpy(3), memcpy(3), memmove(3), strcpy(3), strlcat(3), strlcpy(3) STANDARDS
The strcat() and strncat() functions conform to ISO/IEC 9899:1999 (``ISO C99''). BSD
August 11, 2002 BSD
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