Sponsored Content
Top Forums Programming Problem on acquiring arguments with asterisk '*' (C language) Post 302549939 by Corona688 on Wednesday 24th of August 2011 09:19:33 AM
Old 08-24-2011
If you're feeding *something* into your C program as a raw argument without any shell expansion, that's not going to work, it's the shell's job to expand asterisks for you. (Though if you put them in the system() command, they will expand there because system() runs the commands you give it in a shell.) If you're doing that in the shell, I don't know why it's not expanding, and certainly can't tell without seeing your programs (shell and C).

Last edited by Corona688; 08-24-2011 at 10:42 AM..
 

3 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

problem in replacing asterisk in sed

Hi all, Sed is the one which always trobules me :( here is my input : *** it industry need to be evolved *** in the world and hope so *** to be dream the output i am expecting is : *** it industry need to be evolved *** in the world and hope so *** to be dream ... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: panyam
4 Replies

2. Programming

How to pass the command line arguments to the shell script in c language?

hi, I am new in the shell script, and c programming with linux. I am looking to pass the arguments in c program that should be executed by the shell script. e.g. #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main(int argc, char *argv) { int i; for (i=1;i<argc; i++) { ... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: sharlin
2 Replies

3. Proxy Server

Building up apache httpd on AIX - acquiring RPMs etc.

pardon the ed URL refs but I'm not allowed to post URLs yet. and the misspelling in the original thread title, which I can't edit even in 'advanced' greetings all, posting this here rather than in Web Development since I suspect this is rather AIX-specific and will need some arcane knowledge,... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: maraixadm
2 Replies
DROPLANG(1)						  PostgreSQL Client Applications					       DROPLANG(1)

NAME
droplang - remove a PostgreSQL procedural language SYNOPSIS
droplang [ connection-options... ] langname [ dbname ] droplang [ connection-options... ] --list | -l dbname DESCRIPTION
droplang is a utility for removing an existing programming language from a PostgreSQL database. droplang can drop any procedural language, even those not supplied by the PostgreSQL distribution. Although backend programming languages can be removed directly using several SQL commands, it is recommended to use droplang because it performs a number of checks and is much easier to use. See DROP LANGUAGE [drop_language(7)] for more. OPTIONS
droplang accepts the following command line arguments: langname Specifies the name of the backend programming language to be removed. [-d] dbname [--dbname] dbname Specifies from which database the language should be removed. The default is to use the database with the same name as the current system user. -e --echo Displays SQL commands as they are executed. -l --list Shows a list of already installed languages in the target database (which must be specified). droplang also accepts the following command line arguments for connection parameters: -h host --host host Specifies the host name of the machine on which the server is running. If host begins with a slash, it is used as the directory for the Unix domain socket. -p port --port port Specifies the Internet TCP/IP port or local Unix domain socket file extension on which the server is listening for connections. -U username --username username User name to connect as -W --password Force password prompt. ENVIRONMENT
PGDATABASE PGHOST PGPORT PGUSER Default connection parameters. DIAGNOSTICS
Most error messages are self-explanatory. If not, run droplang with the --echo option and see under the respective SQL command for details. Check also under psql(1) for more possibilities. NOTES
Use createlang(1) to add a language. EXAMPLES
To remove pltcl: $ droplang pltcl dbname SEE ALSO
createlang(1), DROP LANGUAGE [drop_language(7)] Application 2002-11-22 DROPLANG(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:29 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy