If you just want to do programming and not some low level stuff (device drivers, etc), then consider using a high level language like Python or Ruby. These languages let you concentrate on getting your stuff going, without having to learn low level stuff like pointers (c/c++) and such. Plus, they provide good to use data structures such as hashes, dictionaries and arrays (and abundance of libraries) which you can make use of in your programming task which you can find them lacking or hard to use in other languages. For Python, go to doc.python.org, For Ruby go to Programming Ruby: The Pragmatic Programmer's Guide
A rudimentary approach to convert your word from one language to another is to use a lookup table (that is, your hashes/dictionary). here's a demo in Ruby
(of course, actual spanish may not be spoken like that.). you can further expand this list by creating a list of such mappings in a database or a flat file. And this is written in like less than a minute. Try doing that with C/C++ (or even Java)
I see you guys encouraged people studied and used C while they were working on UNIX. Does C++ or JAVA matter? And in the past threads, Neo, PxT, and other members recommanded lots good books. I think those people who asked for the references, such as Dominic, had experiences on sys admin or... (8 Replies)
I was wondering if someone could tell me where I could learn everything about Unix/Linux
and I was also wondering what the differance between Unix and Linux was :confused:
Ive never used it, never seen it.. But Im interested in learning :D (3 Replies)
Can someone enligten me on what below program does?
I understand getchar and putchar.. but what is this program suppose to do?
I try to put printf on it, but it shows nothing..
can someone explain to me what this program is suppose to do?
It is reading something and assigning to c?
so, if... (8 Replies)
I'm new to the UNIX world and have to learn scripting for my job. Presented with multiple scripts to learn (and then have to maintain in the future) is there a utility or process to input a script in it's native form and output what each line would look like fully parsed (i.e.: all variable names... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I am trying to learn Networking Programming in C in unix enviorment. I want to know how good it is to become a network programmer. i am crazy about Network programming but i also want to opt for the best carreer options. Anybody experienced Network Programmer, please tell me is my... (5 Replies)
I need a small and simple clarification...
Can someone tell me whether PERL is a programming language or not.
Also, can shell scripts also considered as programming language or not.
Also, please tell me the exact difference between programming language and scripting.
Please help.... (3 Replies)
I'm in college now and a part of a subject in this semester is learning UNIX, though the teacher failed to explain the basics, I feel, we got straight to the Unix Terminal and started putting in commands without much explanation what they were for. I quickly adapted to the basic ones, but in 5... (4 Replies)
Type in commands that do the following.
Part 1
Send the output to a textfile using the "script" command.
Attach the "script" file with your output. Don't worry about any mistakes while you are typing - you don't need to do it over and you don't need to clean up your script file.
1) ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: leaner
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT POSIX
ecppl
ecppl(1) Tntnet users guide ecppl(1)NAME
ecppl - language-extractor for ecpp
SYNOPSIS
ecppl [-I dir] [-ln] [-o output-filename] ecpp-filename
DESCRIPTION
Ecppl is the language-extractor for ecpp. Ecpp - the template-language used with tntnet - supports internationalized applications. In
ecpp-templates a tag <i18n> changes the meaning of curly braces. A phrase, which is enclosed in curly braces, can be translated. At run-
time the phrase is looked up in a language-library. This mode can be quit with the tag </i18n>. Phrases must not have newlines or tabs.
Every phrase, which is marked as translatable, is extracted with ecppl and written to standard output or to a specified output-filename
line by line.
OPTIONS -I dir Search include-files in directory. This option can be passed multiple times. All specified directories are searched in turn for
include-files.
-l Extract language-phrases (the default)
-n Extract non-language-phrases
-o filename
Specify output filename
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Tommi Makitalo <tommi@tntnet.org>.
SEE ALSO tntnet(1), ecpp(7), ecppll(1).
Tntnet 2006-08-26 ecppl(1)