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Homework and Emergencies Homework & Coursework Questions Unix/Linux Math Decimal to Whole Number Format? Post 302549731 by frank_rizzo on Tuesday 23rd of August 2011 11:08:30 PM
Old 08-24-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by yazu
And what is wrong with just changing 0.03 to 3 and 0.06 to 6?
Just curious -- in this context why would you convert .03 to 3 or .06 to 6 for any reason? I cannot think of any.

---------- Post updated at 22:08 ---------- Previous update was at 22:05 ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by Iceman69
Frank, that is good question. I don't wanna sound foolish, but I honestly don't know what truncated means.
example truncation

1.2 converted to an integer equals 1. everything after the decimal is truncated.


IMO I would avoid floating point math in shell scripting. use bc or another language like Perl/awk to do the work.
 

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mktemp(3C)						   Standard C Library Functions 						mktemp(3C)

NAME
mktemp - make a unique file name from a template SYNOPSIS
#include <stdlib.h> char *mktemp(char *template); DESCRIPTION
The mktemp() function replaces the contents of the string pointed to by template with a unique file name, and returns template. The string in template should look like a file name with six trailing 'X's; mktemp() will replace the 'X's with a character string that can be used to create a unique file name. Only 26 unique file names per thread can be created for each unique template. RETURN VALUES
The mktemp() function returns the pointer template. If a unique name cannot be created, template points to a null string. ERRORS
No errors are defined. EXAMPLES
Example 1: Generate a filename. The following example replaces the contents of the "template" string with a 10-character filename beginning with the characters "file" and returns a pointer to the "template" string that contains the new filename. #include <stdlib.h> ... char *template = "/tmp/fileXXXXXX"; char *ptr; ptr = mktemp(template); USAGE
Between the time a pathname is created and the file opened, it is possible for some other process to create a file with the same name. The mkstemp(3C) function avoids this problem and is preferred over this function. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Standard | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
mkstemp(3C), tmpfile(3C), tmpnam(3C), attributes(5), standards(5) SunOS 5.10 15 Sep 2004 mktemp(3C)
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