Are you talking about C?
Is it shell script? - the syntax depends on what shell you are using
will show you your shell. We need to know which shell you are using.
I have encountered a very weird behavior of a global variable in Korn Shell in AIX:
A function f1 in my script pipes the output of the function f2 to a program.
A variable defined as global using typeset gets its value in f2.
That value is not seen in f1. If I remove the pipe ksh recognizes the... (2 Replies)
Please go through the following two versions of code :-
Version 1 --- string1 and string2 declared as Global variables
The output is :-- (as expected sprintf is overwriting the first byte of string2 with NULL)
string1=send
string2=
#include <stdio.h>
char string1;
char string2;
main()... (2 Replies)
Can someone give me "the lecture" on why you shouldn't make all your varables global when programming in perl. I have been doing this but I have heard that it is not a good practice. (3 Replies)
Hi,
I hav created a script that calls a sub-script. In both the scripts i called the configuration file. Now i wanted to use a variable that should be used in both script and sub-script files. Actually, i wanted to return a file name and the return status to the script file from the sub-script.... (6 Replies)
is this the step?
add fs
set dir=/export
set special=/export
set type=lofs
add options rw
end
i notice i can't post immediately, moderator needs to moderate. i have 1 more post still haven't appear in the forum..hmm.... (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
My requirement is I have file called /opt/orahome/.profile in non global zone.
PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/ucb:/etc:/usr/sbin:/usr/local/bin:/usr/openwin/bin:.
export PATH
PS1="\${ORACLE_SID}:`hostname`:\$PWD$ "
export PS1
EDITOR=vi
export EDITOR
ENV=/opt/orahome/.kshrc
export ENV... (1 Reply)
I am seeing different output from "who -u" when we execute "who -u" in global INIT and local SRP after calling telnet, rlogin and remsh. We are not seeing correct output when we login to local SRP using telnet, rlogin and remsh.
srp_init just creates an UTMP entry in the UTMP database. Based my... (1 Reply)
Hi,
I have a script which can be called from any path on the machine. It kind of acts like a global script. How do I achive this? :confused:
The path from which I call it is different from the path where it exists.
(where <script name> )
Thanks and Regards,
Preetham R. (1 Reply)
hi,
i have a shell script which calls another shell which in turn calls another shell script.
Main_shell_script.sh
echo "In Main_shell_script.sh"
FILENAME="original.txt" # LINE 1
DST_FILENAME=$FILENAME # LINE 2
echo "FILENAME = {$FILENAME}"
echo "DST_FILENAME =... (3 Replies)
hi all,
i need a help for the following query.
Thanks in advance for your valuable time.
i have a main.pl file which has a global variable declared as below.
our myVar=0;
call first.pl script from the main.pl script.
print the value of myVar (the value is still 0 and not 10.)
i have a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hemalathak10
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT SUSE
global
global(n) Tcl Built-In Commands global(n)
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
global - Access global variables
SYNOPSIS
global varname ?varname ...?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
This command has no effect unless executed in the context of a proc body. If the global command is executed in the context of a proc body,
it creates local variables linked to the corresponding global variables (though these linked variables, like those created by upvar, are
not included in the list returned by info locals).
If varname contains namespace qualifiers, the local variable's name is the unqualified name of the global variable, as determined by the
namespace tail command.
varname is always treated as the name of a variable, not an array element. An error is returned if the name looks like an array element,
such as a(b).
EXAMPLES
This procedure sets the namespace variable ::a::x
proc reset {} {
global a::x
set x 0
}
This procedure accumulates the strings passed to it in a global buffer, separated by newlines. It is useful for situations when you want
to build a message piece-by-piece (as if with puts) but send that full message in a single piece (e.g. over a connection opened with socket
or as part of a counted HTTP response).
proc accum {string} {
global accumulator
append accumulator $string
}
SEE ALSO
namespace(n), upvar(n), variable(n)
KEYWORDS
global, namespace, procedure, variable
Tcl global(n)