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celibacy(1) [linux man page]

CELIBACY(1)						      General Commands Manual						       CELIBACY(1)

NAME
celibacy -- don't have sex SYNOPSIS
celibacy DESCRIPTION
Does nothing worth mentioning. CELIBACY(1)

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gd_endianness(3)						      GETDATA							  gd_endianness(3)

NAME
gd_endianness -- report the byte sex of fields in a dirfile SYNOPSIS
#include <getdata.h> unsigned long gd_endianness(DIRFILE *dirfile, int fragment_index); DESCRIPTION
The gd_endianness() function queries a dirfile(5) database specified by dirfile and returns the byte sex for the fragment indexed by frag- ment_index. The byte sex of a fragment indicate the endianness of data stored in binary files associated with RAW fields defined in the specified fragment. The endianness of a fragment containing no RAW fields is not meaningful. The dirfile argument must point to a valid DIRFILE object previously created by a call to gd_open(3). RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, gd_endianness() returns the byte sex of the specified fragment, which will be either GD_BIG_ENDIAN or GD_LIT- TLE_ENDIAN, bitwise-or'd with either GD_ARM_ENDIAN or GD_NOT_ARM_ENDIAN, indicating whether double-precision floating point data in this fragment are stored in the old ARM middle-endian format. On error, it returns zero and sets the dirfile error to a non-zero error value. Possible error values are: GD_E_BAD_DIRFILE The supplied dirfile was invalid. GD_E_BAD_INDEX The supplied index was out of range. The dirfile error may be retrieved by calling gd_error(3). A descriptive error string for the last error encountered can be obtained from a call to gd_error_string(3). SEE ALSO
gd_alter_endianness(3), gd_getdata(3), gd_error(3), gd_error_string(3), gd_open(3), dirfile(5), dirfile-format(5) Version 0.7.0 17 July 2010 gd_endianness(3)
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