Now that I have getch() to work, I have yet another problem. BTW, thank you for answering these questions, I do ask a lot, only because I am eager to know, what is a board used for anyways :)
Ok, he's the problem...
#include iostream.h
#include conio.h
int main()
{
char movement;
... (2 Replies)
Hello
if I like to move file from defined directories system to new directory that not contained any directories system structure .
But I like to create the same file system structure as source directory for example :
I have 2 directories: foo1 and foo2
foo1 have directories and foo2 have... (2 Replies)
hallo, ik heb hier een vraagje. hoeveel gebruikers kunnen er op 1 unix systeem. hopelijk antwoorden golle nu want ik moet da vinde voor school en die leerkracht zaagt. :p
groetjes eu wacht wa was mijne nick ah ja vraagje
groetjes vraagje
ik kan geen engels dus antwoord liever in het... (1 Reply)
Hey my friend was asking me if i knew a way to cout how many different words in a file. I told him no not off hand, but i was thinking about it, and i started to wonder also. I imagine this is probably pretty simple im just missing something, I keep confusing my self with how you would compair and... (16 Replies)
Hi,
Can anyone please explain a little about df command. I have following question:
Following example is showing % used as 4 where as total free blocks are 15.46 out of 16.00 MB blocks.
df -m /test
Filesystem MBblocks Free %Used Iused %Iused ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: itsabhi9
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
getunimap
GETUNIMAP(8) Linux GETUNIMAP(8)NAME
getunimap - dump the unicode map for the current console to stdout
SYNOPSIS
getunimap [ -s ] [ -C console ]
DESCRIPTION
The getunimap program is old and obsolete. It is now part of setfont (1).
The getunimap program outputs the unicode map (also called a "Screen Font Map") for the current console to standard output.
The -C option may be used with Linux 2.6.1 and later to get the map for a console different from the current one. Its argument is a path-
name.
The output of getunimap is of the form
0xAA U+1234 # comment
where 0xAA is the font character code and U+1234 is a unicode character, that if displayed, will be displayed using glyph 0xAA in the font.
Many unicode characters may be mapped to the same glyph.
the Hash symbol # is used as a comment delimiter; characters after a hash sign (to the end of the line) are comments.
The -s option will sort and merge elements, sorting on font character. Hence, it will produce output of the form:
0x22 U+1234 U+5678 U+3456
0x23 U+0023
etc., listing the multiple unicode characters that map to a font glyph.
The output of getunimap is of the form accepted by setfont and psfaddtable
SEE ALSO psfaddtable(1), setfont(1).
Console Tools 2004-01-01 GETUNIMAP(8)