Hi,
Thanks for your quick suggestion. I grazed over the 'constant' pragma.
From the given link,
My main aim is to use the constant in a 'if' condition.
To elaborate, my scenario is:
Then that is not strictly a "constant".
Why do you have to do it like that? You can take a reference of a filehandle and then use it with the slurp ( <> ).
in the header file orville.h, outside of the #ifdef #endif , there is the following
#define JOB_CONTROL /* support job-control */
As you can see, the JOB_CONTROL macro has no value associated with it. Here is what I go when I ran grep on the entire source code.
$ grep -iR... (6 Replies)
hi
I have a perl script from which I call a shell script and pass mail variable to it.
The mail works fine if I give 1 recipient but fails for multiple.
conv.pl:-
$mialing = "anu\@abc.com"
rest.sh $mialing
rest.sh
mail -s "hi" $1
This works fine
But I need to define multiple... (2 Replies)
Hello,
I would like to conditionaly comment in my code source some fields from arrays. So I use the property ## from the #define definition.
my code:
...
#define slet /##*
#define etsl *##/
...
const T_SVT_ADLL_A653_DESC A_DESC =
{
{ slet qwerty etsl SLICING,... (3 Replies)
if i do this in C
#define NUM 1234512345
then how come i cant print it out using
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
printf("%d\n", NUM);
return 0;
}
well the result is -1219236538, why isnt it 1234512345 ? (7 Replies)
Hi,
Is it possible in perl to have a hash defined with variables as theirs key values, like:
%account = ('username' => 'boy', 'password' => $password);
Thanks (1 Reply)
Hey everyone. So I'm looking at a few C programming resources, and it seems, by convention how you should write and define a function, is first declare it's existence before your main...then call it somewhere in your main, and then define after, at the end of the program? Is this necessary? I mean... (7 Replies)
Hi,
I just define the variable in script and use those script in another script but the variable not recognize.
test1.sh
#!/bin/bash
DB="test_db"
USR="test_user"
PWD="test_pwd"
HST="24.254.87.12"
test2.sh
#!/bin/bash
./test1.sh
mysql -u $USR -p $PWD -h $HST... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: fspalero
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cpan::perl::releases
CPAN::Perl::Releases(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation CPAN::Perl::Releases(3pm)NAME
CPAN::Perl::Releases - Mapping Perl releases on CPAN to the location of the tarballs
VERSION
version 0.60
SYNOPSIS
use CPAN::Perl::Releases qw[perl_tarballs];
my $perl = '5.14.0';
my $hashref = perl_tarballs( $perl );
print "Location: ", $_, "
" for values %{ $hashref };
DESCRIPTION
CPAN::Perl::Releases is a module that contains the mappings of all "perl" releases that have been uploaded to CPAN to the "authors/id/"
path that the tarballs reside in.
This is static data, but newer versions of this module will be made available as new releases of "perl" are uploaded to CPAN.
FUNCTIONS
"perl_tarballs"
Takes one parameter, a "perl" version to search for. Returns an hashref on success or "undef" otherwise.
The returned hashref will have a key/value for each type of tarball. A key of "tar.gz" indicates the location of a gzipped tar file and
"tar.bz2" of a bzip2'd tar file. The values will be the relative path under "authors/id/" on CPAN where the indicated tarball will be
located.
perl_tarballs( '5.14.0' );
Returns a hashref like:
{
"tar.bz2" => "J/JE/JESSE/perl-5.14.0.tar.bz2",
"tar.gz" => "J/JE/JESSE/perl-5.14.0.tar.gz"
}
Not all "perl" releases had "tar.bz2", but only a "tar.gz".
SEE ALSO
<http://www.cpan.org/src/5.0/>
<http://search.cpan.org/faq.html#Is_there_a_API?>
AUTHOR
Chris Williams <chris@bingosnet.co.uk>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Chris Williams.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
perl v5.14.2 2012-06-20 CPAN::Perl::Releases(3pm)