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Top Forums Programming How to store argv[x] in my program??? Post 302582813 by Corona688 on Sunday 18th of December 2011 01:39:39 PM
Old 12-18-2011
Quote:
Originally Posted by jlliagre
The separator is one of the characters in the IFS variable, which can be modified to suit your needs
That's only true when the program's being launched by a shell. Even then, it's the shell that does the splitting, not the program.
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Session::Store::File(3) 				User Contributed Perl Documentation				   Session::Store::File(3)

NAME
Apache::Session::Store::File - Store persistent data on the filesystem SYNOPSIS
use Apache::Session::Store::File; my $store = new Apache::Session::Store::File; $store->insert($ref); $store->update($ref); $store->materialize($ref); $store->remove($ref); DESCRIPTION
This module fulfills the storage interface of Apache::Session. The serialized objects are stored in files on your filesystem. OPTIONS
This module requires one argument in the usual Apache::Session style. The name of the option is Directory, and the value is the full path of the directory where you wish to place the files. Example tie %s, 'Apache::Session::File', undef, {Directory => '/tmp/sessions'}; NOTES
All session objects are stored in the same directory. Some filesystems, such as Linux's ext2fs, have O(n) performance where n is the number of files in a directory. Other filesystems, like Sun's UFS, and Linux's reiserfs, do not have this problem. You should consider your filesystem's performance before using this module to store many objects. AUTHOR
This module was written by Jeffrey William Baker <jwbaker@acm.org>. SEE ALSO
Apache::Session perl v5.12.1 2007-09-28 Session::Store::File(3)
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