I did it,
I don't know why, but the string "user=%s&pass=%s" was creating a segmentation fault, what i did was specify which characters i wanted to seek, like this:
I have a string
Form this string, I want to extract
I am unable to do that with sscanf because of the space between the words. What else can I use?
#include <stdio.h>
char buf_2;
int
main()
{
char *buf_1 = "\\\\?\\whats going on";
sscanf(buf_1,... (4 Replies)
I need to match a float inside a very long string (about 5000 chars) with sscanf. (I trimmed the string in this example.) I can't seem to match all the chars that come before and after the float.
int main(void)
{
char A = "";
strcat(A, " hello world! WORD' name='5.3498' hello world! ... (1 Reply)
sscanf does not stop at the first "&". How can I extract "doe" ?
char A = "name=john&last=doe&job=vacant&";
char B = "last";
char C = "";
char *POINTER = strstr(A, B);
sscanf(POINTER + strlen(B), "=%s%*", C);
printf("%s\n", C); // doe&job=vacant& (2 Replies)
How can I separetely extract the string and int after "dribble" ? (sscanf must limit TEXT to 9 chars to avoid buffer overflows.)
How come this code does not work with "dribbletext08" but does with "dribbletext05" ?
int main(void)
{
char TEXT = "";
int NUMBER = 0;
... (2 Replies)
Hi with the following code
int a, b;
while ((n = readline (connfd, buf, sizeof(buf)-1)) > 0)
{
buf = '\0';
if (sscanf(buf,"%d %d",&a,&b) != 2)
snprintf (buf, sizeof(buf), "data error\r\n");
else
{
printf("\nRecvd %d and %d",a,b);
... (1 Reply)
Hello, I have formatted lines delimited by colon ":", and I need to parse the line into two parts with sscanf() with format specifiers.
infile.txt:
Sample Name: sample1
SNPs : 91
MNPs : 1
Insertions : 5
Deletions ... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: yifangt
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
appconfig::cgi
AppConfig::CGI(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation AppConfig::CGI(3)NAME
AppConfig::CGI - Perl5 module for processing CGI script parameters.
SYNOPSIS
use AppConfig::CGI;
my $state = AppConfig::State->new(\%cfg);
my $cgi = AppConfig::CGI->new($state);
$cgi->parse($cgi_query);
$cgi->parse(); # looks for CGI query in environment
OVERVIEW
AppConfig::CGI is a Perl5 module which implements a CGI interface to AppConfig. It examines the QUERY_STRING environment variable, or a
string passed explicitly by parameter, which represents the additional parameters passed to a CGI query. This is then used to update
variable values in an AppConfig::State object accordingly.
AppConfig::CGI is distributed as part of the AppConfig bundle.
DESCRIPTION
USING THE AppConfig::CGI MODULE
To import and use the AppConfig::CGI module the following line should appear in your Perl script:
use AppConfig::CGI;
AppConfig::CGI is used automatically if you use the AppConfig module and create an AppConfig::CGI object through the cgi() method.
AppConfig::CGI is implemented using object-oriented methods. A new AppConfig::CGI object is created and initialised using the new()
method. This returns a reference to a new AppConfig::CGI object. A reference to an AppConfig::State object should be passed in as the
first parameter:
my $state = AppConfig::State->new();
my $cgi = AppConfig::CGI->new($state);
This will create and return a reference to a new AppConfig::CGI object.
PARSING CGI QUERIES
The "parse()" method is used to parse a CGI query which can be specified explicitly, or is automatically extracted from the "QUERY_STRING"
CGI environment variable. This currently limits the module to only supporting the GET method.
See AppConfig for information about using the AppConfig::CGI module via the cgi() method.
AUTHOR
Andy Wardley, "<abw@wardley.org<gt">
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1997-2007 Andy Wardley. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright (C) 1997,1998 Canon Research Centre Europe Ltd.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
AppConfig, AppConfig::State
perl v5.16.3 2007-05-30 AppConfig::CGI(3)