I have a program which I wish to modify. It used to be run from the command line, but now I wish to change this so it can be used as a function.
The program has complex argument processing so I want to pass my paramters to as if it were being called by the OS as a program.
I have tried to... (2 Replies)
I searched on the forums. No advises.
I am using a previous source code. I changed the main function main(int argc, char **argv) in a function misc(int argc, char **argv). How do you use the argc and argv parameters? This is how I am calling the function :
char param;
strcat(param,"wgrib ");... (4 Replies)
I have a script that asks a bunch of questions using the following method for input:
print "Name:";
while(<>){
chomp;
$name=$_;
}
So for example, if the questions asked for name, age, & color (in that order)... I want to be able to easily convert $ARGV into the input expected by... (2 Replies)
Hi C experts,
I have the following code for adding command line option for a program
int main (argc, argv)
int argc;
char *argv;
{
char *mem_type; //memory type
char *name; //name of the memory
int addr; //address bits
int data; ... (5 Replies)
this is in one of my scripts...
if ($#argv == 0) then
echo 'blah bla'
exit 0
endif
I want it to be something like this...
if ($#argv == 0 OR $argv >=3)
echo 'blah bla'
exit 0
endif
so when the arguments are none, or greater than three I want this "if then" to take over. how? I... (5 Replies)
Hello all,
Had a quick question:
In a typical csh script should inputting via stdin (i.e. set i = $< ) increase the value of $#argv ?
echo enter an value:
set val= "$<"
if($#argv == 0) then
echo No args
else
echo The arg is $argv
so if a value is inputted #argv... (1 Reply)
when i run my program, i have a parameter, that i want to set the value to another string
i am using
int main(int argc, char **argv) {
char my_str=argv;
printf("%s",my_str);
return 0;
}
and i get
Segmentation fault
ran using
./my_prog /usr/share/dict/words hello1
... (2 Replies)
I'm working on my own pow function and I need to make a copy of *argv but
I think that I am having trouble with the size of *argv and the size of any array that I
make. The code below isn't working for me. and I want to accept any number no
matter the size with pow -f 2 2. I was working out... (16 Replies)
All of my machines (various open source derivatives on x86 and amd64) store argv above the stack (at a higher memory address). I am curious to learn if any systems store argv below the stack (at a lower memory address).
I am particularly interested in proprietary Unices, such as Solaris, HP-UX,... (9 Replies)
So i am trying to read in file
readFile <GivenFile> modFile
looking for a regular file under the directories in the GivenFile and print them out is my over all goal.
basically I am looking for anything that looks like a directory in the given file and printing it out.
Since I am trying to do... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: squidGreen
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
text::glob
Text::Glob(3pm) User Contributed Perl Documentation Text::Glob(3pm)NAME
Text::Glob - match globbing patterns against text
SYNOPSIS
use Text::Glob qw( match_glob glob_to_regex );
print "matched
" if match_glob( "foo.*", "foo.bar" );
# prints foo.bar and foo.baz
my $regex = glob_to_regex( "foo.*" );
for ( qw( foo.bar foo.baz foo bar ) ) {
print "matched: $_
" if /$regex/;
}
DESCRIPTION
Text::Glob implements glob(3) style matching that can be used to match against text, rather than fetching names from a filesystem. If you
want to do full file globbing use the File::Glob module instead.
Routines
match_glob( $glob, @things_to_test )
Returns the list of things which match the glob from the source list.
glob_to_regex( $glob )
Returns a compiled regex which is the equivalent of the globbing pattern.
glob_to_regex_string( $glob )
Returns a regex string which is the equivalent of the globbing pattern.
SYNTAX
The following metacharacters and rules are respected.
"*" - match zero or more characters
"a*" matches "a", "aa", "aaaa" and many many more.
"?" - match exactly one character
"a?" matches "aa", but not "a", or "aaa"
Character sets/ranges
"example.[ch]" matches "example.c" and "example.h"
"demo.[a-c]" matches "demo.a", "demo.b", and "demo.c"
alternation
"example.{foo,bar,baz}" matches "example.foo", "example.bar", and "example.baz"
leading . must be explictly matched
"*.foo" does not match ".bar.foo". For this you must either specify the leading . in the glob pattern (".*.foo"), or set
$Text::Glob::strict_leading_dot to a false value while compiling the regex.
"*" and "?" do not match /
"*.foo" does not match "bar/baz.foo". For this you must either explicitly match the / in the glob ("*/*.foo"), or set
$Text::Glob::strict_wildcard_slash to a false value with compiling the regex.
BUGS
The code uses qr// to produce compiled regexes, therefore this module requires perl version 5.005_03 or newer.
AUTHOR
Richard Clamp <richardc@unixbeard.net>
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007 Richard Clamp. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
SEE ALSO
File::Glob, glob(3)perl v5.10.1 2011-03-05 Text::Glob(3pm)