Though really, I think your program could be rewritten as
People are understandably leery of 'killall', since on some other systems it has a far more, shall we say, literal meaning.
Hi all,
I'm having a rather peculiar problem involving parameter passing with declared functions in my shell script. Hope to get some advice here.
A brief description of my code is as follows:
However, I'm not getting the results I wanted. If I pass in $rdir, I'm going to end up... (4 Replies)
Is it possible to pass a string as an argument from the command line?
I know I can pass a word in but can I put a line of text in with spaces and fullstops or do I just put it in brackets or quotes so the compiler can differinate between the first argument and the second. (1 Reply)
Hi
I need a better idea to implementing following in my code.
I need to store 80 long strings that will be used to display one by one in my GUI application. now i am storing those 80 long string in following two dimentational array.
uchar vpn_alm_long_str={ }
each index will be an... (1 Reply)
Hi
I am passing or want to pass value of a char array, so that even thoug the called routine is changing the values the calling function should not see the values changed, meaning only copy should be passed
Here is the program
#include<iostream.h>
#include<string.h>
void f(char a);
int... (5 Replies)
I am doing a shell script in ksh. I have an output from grep that goes something like this:
wordIWasLookingFor
anotherWordIWasLookingFor
yetAnotherWordIWasLookingFor
I want to toss each line into an array such that:
myArray = wordIWasLookingFor
myArray = anotherWordIWasLookingFor... (3 Replies)
I'm trying to use the following command:
awk -v array1=${array1} -f "filename.awk" input.txt
Then within filename.awk I want to access array1. However, awk mistakes array1 (the third element of the array) for the input file. How I can pass awk this array?
It also appears that awk scripts... (3 Replies)
Hi,
In directory "inoutfiles", I have folders fold0001, fold0002 and so on. Every folder has corresponding file file0001.txt, file0002.txt and so on. I want to perform a certain action on multiple files in one go. The cpp file is in the same directory as "inoutfiles".
This is my code :
... (0 Replies)
Hi,
In directory "inoutfiles", I have folders fold0001, fold0002 and so on. Every folder has corresponding file file0001.txt, file0002.txt and so on. I want to perform a certain action on multiple files in one go. The cpp file is in the same directory as "inoutfiles".
This is my code :
... (1 Reply)
Good grief so this should be easy. Passing an array as an argument to a function. Here is the sample code:
#/bin/bash
function foo {
local p1=${1}
local p2=(${2})
local p3=${3}
echo p1 is $p1
echo p2 is $p2
echo p3 is $p3
}
d1=data1
d2=data2
a=(bat bar baz) (2 Replies)
Semi-newbie, so flame throwers to 'singe-only', please. ;-)
I have a large number of (say) .html files, where I'd like to do a recursive in-place search and replace a particular string. The following bit of perl works fine:
perl -pi -e 's/oldstring/newstring/g' `find ./ -name *.html`
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: johnny_canucl
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
list
LIST(3) 1 LIST(3)list - Assign variables as if they were an arraySYNOPSIS
array list (mixed $var1, [mixed $...])
DESCRIPTION
Like array(3), this is not really a function, but a language construct. list(3) is used to assign a list of variables in one operation.
PARAMETERS
o $var1
- A variable.
RETURN VALUES
Returns the assigned array.
EXAMPLES
Example #1
list(3) examples
<?php
$info = array('coffee', 'brown', 'caffeine');
// Listing all the variables
list($drink, $color, $power) = $info;
echo "$drink is $color and $power makes it special.
";
// Listing some of them
list($drink, , $power) = $info;
echo "$drink has $power.
";
// Or let's skip to only the third one
list( , , $power) = $info;
echo "I need $power!
";
// list() doesn't work with strings
list($bar) = "abcde";
var_dump($bar); // NULL
?>
Example #2
An example use of list(3)
<table>
<tr>
<th>Employee name</th>
<th>Salary</th>
</tr>
<?php
$result = $pdo->query("SELECT id, name, salary FROM employees");
while (list($id, $name, $salary) = $result->fetch(PDO::FETCH_NUM)) {
echo " <tr>
" .
" <td><a href="info.php?id=$id">$name</a></td>
" .
" <td>$salary</td>
" .
" </tr>
";
}
?>
</table>
Example #3
Using nested list(3)
<?php
list($a, list($b, $c)) = array(1, array(2, 3));
var_dump($a, $b, $c);
?>
int(1)int(2)int(3)
Example #4
Using list(3) with array indices
<?php
$info = array('coffee', 'brown', 'caffeine');
list($a[0], $a[1], $a[2]) = $info;
var_dump($a);
?>
Gives the following output (note the order of the elements compared in which order they were written in the list(3) syntax):
array(3) {
[2]=>
string(8) "caffeine"
[1]=>
string(5) "brown"
[0]=>
string(6) "coffee"
}
NOTES
Warning
list(3) assigns the values starting with the right-most parameter. If you are using plain variables, you don't have to worry about
this. But if you are using arrays with indices you usually expect the order of the indices in the array the same you wrote in the
list(3) from left to right; which it isn't. It's assigned in the reverse order.
Warning
Modification of the array during list(3) execution (e.g. using list($a, $b) = $b) results in undefined behavior.
Note
list(3) only works on numerical arrays and assumes the numerical indices start at 0.
SEE ALSO each(3), array(3), extract(3).
PHP Documentation Group LIST(3)