My program usage takes the form for example;
$ theApp 2 "one or more words"
i.e. 3 command line arguments; application name, an integer, some text
My code includes the following 4 lines:
int anInteger;
char words;
sscanf(argv, "%d", &anInteger);
sscanf(argv, "%s", &message);
Based... (2 Replies)
I am trying to print command line arguments one per second. I have this
while
do
echo "6"
shift
echo "5"
shift
echo "4"
shift
echo "3"
shift
echo "2"
shift
echo "1"
shift
done (2 Replies)
I have this while loop and at the end I am trying to get it to tell me the last argument I entered. And with it like this all I get is the sentence with no value for $1. Now I tried moving done after the sentence and it printed the value of $1 after every number. I don't want that I just want... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have to store all the command line arguments into an array.
I have the following code.
**********************
#! /bin/sh
set -A arr_no_updates
i=1
while
do
arr_no_updates=$($i)
echo ${arr_no_updates}
i=$(($i+1))
done**************** (1 Reply)
I have this code, I thought it would automatically know the args sent to script when called from shell. But it seems to not see any...
main script:
. args
. errors
. opt
. clean
dbfile=""
opfile=""
# calls function in script below
chkarg
#check commands (2 Replies)
Hi,
i have a perl script named test.pl. It is executed as
cat *.log|test.pl
i need the complete command line args. I tried using basename $0 but im getting test.pl only but not cat *.log...
Can anyone help me on this.
Thanks in advance (3 Replies)
Hi,
Can you please hint me how to achieve the below?
Input:
$./script.sh start 1 2
Internally inside the script i want to set a single variable with $2 and $3 value?
Output:
CMD=$1
ARGS=$2 $3
--VInodh (10 Replies)
Hello All,
I have a Bash Script and an Expect script that together will SSH to another server and
do some stuff there... From within the Bash Script I process the Command Line Arguments,
which are Required Args and Optional Args.
When I call the Expect script from the Bash Script, I pass... (4 Replies)
I'm using getopts to process command line args in a Bash script. The code looks like this:
while getopts ":cfmvhs:t:" option; do
case $option in
c) operationMode="CHECK"
;;
f) operationMode="FAST"
;;
m) ... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: gencon
6 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
oolite
OOLITE(6) Games Manual OOLITE(6)NAME
Oolite - a space-sim game
SYNOPSIS
oolite
DESCRIPTION
This manual page briefly documents Oolite.
Oolite is a reinterpretation of the 8-bit classic space shooter/trading game Elite, which was written by Ian Bell and David Braben.
FAQ
What is the purpose of the game?
To fly from planet to planet, buying and selling goods, shooting pirates or committing acts of piracy. There's no goal other than perhaps
to achieve the rank of ELITE.
How do I quit?
While docked, use the 'F2' key. When in flight, use the 'p' key.
I'm still confused, how do I play?
Documentation can be found in the /usr/share/doc/oolite directory. You should start with README.TXT.gz for window settings. Then, the
PLAYING.TXT.gz document gives a basic overview of the controls.
For a full description of all controls, please see the "Oolite Reference Sheet" (OoliteRS.pdf) which is suitable for printing out.
Where can I find more information?
For the nostalgic, Ian Bell's "Space Traders Flight Training Manual" for the original BBC Elite is still a very good introduction to the
game and can be found online <http://home.clara.net/iancgbell/elite/manual.htm>.
A large amount of additional information, including advice for newcomers, Oolite Expansion Packs (OXP), the Elite/Oolite wiki, and the
Oolite Bulletin Board is linked from the Oolite home page <http://www.oolite.org/>.
What do the various colors represent on the radar?
o White - unpowered items that can't mass-lock the in-system drive.
o Green/Yellow - navigation buoys.
o Yellow - powered craft.
o Red - powered craft identified as hostile.
o Green - space stations.
o Green/Red - thargoids
o Purple - police
o Blue/Red - police on intercept
o Red/Yellow - active mine (about to detonate)
AUTHOR
Oolite was written by Giles Williams and others, and it was ported to the GNU/Linux operating system by the Oolite Linux project. The
original version can be found at the Oolite home page <http://www.oolite.org/>.
This manual page was written by Eddy Petrisor <eddy.petrisor@gmail.com>, for the Debian project and updated by various maintainers, (but
may be used by others).
March 6th, 2011 OOLITE(6)