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Full Discussion: Can expr deal with decimals?
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Can expr deal with decimals? Post 302744805 by hxdrummerxc on Friday 14th of December 2012 09:39:32 PM
Old 12-14-2012
Thanks a lot everyone. I got that part all sorted out now.
Everything is done, I wrote the whole shell script and it was working fine.


I have temperatures from another file to use as an input file.
ex.... of input file
0
5
10
32
64

I also have the conversion formula in a separate file (f2c.ss)

I needed to have my shell script take those and convert them from Celsius to Fahrenheit, and put them in an output file.

The problem is, I had everything done, and it worked. But I was using a while loop, and I just found out that I need to use as for/do loop.

This is what im working with right now,

This is a snippet of the for loop in my main script file:
Code:
for temp in `cat $input_file`
do
./c2f.ss "$temp"
echo $temp
done


And this is my c2f.ss file (which tested by itself, works perfect)
Code:
read c
f=$(echo $c / 5 \* 9 + 32 | bc -l);
echo $c "=" ${f%%.*} >> ans.file

The c2f script works great now, thanks to the help of all of you.
But something is wrong with my for loop, and I can't figure it out.

when I run my main script I keep getting the following error:

main: 39: ./c2f.ss: Permission denied
0
main: 39: ./c2f.ss: Permission denied
5
main: 39: ./c2f.ss: Permission denied
10
main: 39: ./c2f.ss: Permission denied
32
main: 39: ./c2f.ss: Permission denied
64

I had it all done with a while loop. But I was told that I have to use a for loop, and was given the code for the for loop. But there is obviously an error in the for loop code.

Anyone have any ideas?
 

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Tcl_Main(3)						      Tcl Library Procedures						       Tcl_Main(3)

__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

NAME
Tcl_Main, Tcl_SetMainLoop - main program and event loop definition for Tcl-based applications SYNOPSIS
#include <tcl.h> Tcl_Main(argc, argv, appInitProc) Tcl_SetMainLoop(mainLoopProc) ARGUMENTS
int argc (in) Number of elements in argv. char *argv[] (in) Array of strings containing command-line arguments. Tcl_AppInitProc *appInitProc (in) Address of an application-specific initialization procedure. The value for this argument is usually Tcl_AppInit. Tcl_MainLoopProc *mainLoopProc (in) Address of an application-specific event loop procedure. _________________________________________________________________ DESCRIPTION
Tcl_Main can serve as the main program for Tcl-based shell applications. A "shell application" is a program like tclsh or wish that sup- ports both interactive interpretation of Tcl and evaluation of a script contained in a file given as a command line argument. Tcl_Main is offered as a convenience to developers of shell applications, so they do not have to reproduce all of the code for proper initialization of the Tcl library and interactive shell operation. Other styles of embedding Tcl in an application are not supported by Tcl_Main. Those must be achieved by calling lower level functions in the Tcl library directly. The Tcl_Main function has been offered by the Tcl library since release Tcl 7.4. In older releases of Tcl, the Tcl library itself defined a function main, but that lacks flexibility of embedding style and having a function main in a library (particularly a shared library) causes problems on many systems. Having main in the Tcl library would also make it hard to use Tcl in C++ programs, since C++ programs must have special C++ main functions. Normally each shell application contains a small main function that does nothing but invoke Tcl_Main. Tcl_Main then does all the work of creating and running a tclsh-like application. Tcl_Main is not provided by the public interface of Tcl's stub library. Programs that call Tcl_Main must be linked against the standard Tcl library. Extensions (stub-enabled or not) are not intended to call Tcl_Main. Tcl_Main is not thread-safe. It should only be called by a single master thread of a multi-threaded application. This restriction is not a problem with normal use described above. Tcl_Main and therefore all applications based upon it, like tclsh, use Tcl_GetStdChannel to initialize the standard channels to their default values. See Tcl_StandardChannels for more information. Tcl_Main supports two modes of operation, depending on the values of argc and argv. If the first few arguments in argv match ?-encoding name? fileName, where fileName does not begin with the character -, then fileName is taken to be the name of a file containing a startup script, and name is taken to be the name of the encoding of the contents of that file, which Tcl_Main will attempt to evaluate. Otherwise, Tcl_Main will enter an interactive mode. In either mode, Tcl_Main will define in its master interpreter the Tcl variables argc, argv, argv0, and tcl_interactive, as described in the documentation for tclsh. When it has finished its own initialization, but before it processes commands, Tcl_Main calls the procedure given by the appInitProc argu- ment. This procedure provides a "hook" for the application to perform its own initialization of the interpreter created by Tcl_Main, such as defining application-specific commands. The procedure must have an interface that matches the type Tcl_AppInitProc: typedef int Tcl_AppInitProc(Tcl_Interp *interp); AppInitProc is almost always a pointer to Tcl_AppInit; for more details on this procedure, see the documentation for Tcl_AppInit. When the appInitProc is finished, Tcl_Main enters one of its two modes. If a startup script has been provided, Tcl_Main attempts to evalu- ate it. Otherwise, interactive mode begins with examination of the variable tcl_rcFileName in the master interpreter. If that variable exists and holds the name of a readable file, the contents of that file are evaluated in the master interpreter. Then interactive opera- tions begin, with prompts and command evaluation results written to the standard output channel, and commands read from the standard input channel and then evaluated. The prompts written to the standard output channel may be customized by defining the Tcl variables tcl_prompt1 and tcl_prompt2 as described in the documentation for tclsh. The prompts and command evaluation results are written to the standard output channel only if the Tcl variable tcl_interactive in the master interpreter holds a non-zero integer value. Tcl_SetMainLoop allows setting an event loop procedure to be run. This allows, for example, Tk to be dynamically loaded and set its event loop. The event loop will run following the startup script. If you are in interactive mode, setting the main loop procedure will cause the prompt to become fileevent based and then the loop procedure is called. When the loop procedure returns in interactive mode, interac- tive operation will continue. The main loop procedure must have an interface that matches the type Tcl_MainLoopProc: typedef void Tcl_MainLoopProc(void); Tcl_Main does not return. Normally a program based on Tcl_Main will terminate when the exit command is evaluated. In interactive mode, if an EOF or channel error is encountered on the standard input channel, then Tcl_Main itself will evaluate the exit command after the main loop procedure (if any) returns. In non-interactive mode, after Tcl_Main evaluates the startup script, and the main loop procedure (if any) returns, Tcl_Main will also evaluate the exit command. SEE ALSO
tclsh(1), Tcl_GetStdChannel(3), Tcl_StandardChannels(3), Tcl_AppInit(3), exit(n) KEYWORDS
application-specific initialization, command-line arguments, main program Tcl 8.4 Tcl_Main(3)
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