using cs50 videos. I'm working on writing a caesar cipher program(pset2) in c using Xcode and the command line tool. So far I just press play and it compiles and runs my source code. Now I need to use command line arguments, how do I enter command line arguments with the tools I'm using?
I need to write a ANSI program to print out each command line argument on a separate line using a for-loop. also it need to print the name of the executable .so far I have
Code:
#include <stdio.h> int main(int argc, char **argv) { int i; printf("")
l need to write a program which writes out its command line arguments in reverse order one per line. The output from the program should look like this:
% a.out Two roads diverged in a yellow wood wood yellow a in diverged roads Two
I write a program which now works perfectly well. However, I want to make it run at the right time automatically, instead of waiting for a user to start it when needed.
The basic problem is, that in a WinPE environment an exe is running. Unfortunately it would need critical input, which must be inputted perfectly. So, I wrote a program which gets the data and sends it to the other app, by bringing it to the front and presses the keys needed using SendInput().
However, this program should wait for it's cue, then get on the inputting part. It's cue should be the point where the program waits for the first user input with this displayed on the last line:
Text:
My question is: how to listen and check whether the last line displayed is "Text:"?
I've tried with AttachConsole(), but for some reason it opens a new console window. I checked and the PID I'm using is the console window's, so I don't know why that happens.
Please don't criticize the first line. I know it can be ambiguous, but I modified it, When actually using it, the exe name will be in the title, so it will be unique.
I am using visual studio 2010 c++ express for C/C++ programming but is novice here to take command line arguments..i did went to project->properties->debugging and specified there the command line arguments but it didnt work..i think i need to know the format to enter the arguments.
int get_command_line (char * sa) { char * s; char * l = fgets(s, 300*5, stdin); int i = 0; int j; int n;
[Code] ....
The aim is to have the function return the number of arguments made after assigning each of the arguments to a c string stored in an array of five pointers. This is how I declare this:
int main(void) int n; char s0[300]; char s1[300]; char s2[300]; char s3[300];
I'm trying to read in a file specified in the command line but I'm having some trouble. The command line entry specifies the inputfile preceded by '<' and the output file preceded by '>' like so
I am writing a c++ program in Linux.. I am reading a line from commandline at run time using "getline(std::cin,str);". now, what i want is if i left the commandline as idle (terminal as idle), then i want to know that the commandline is empty... is it possible ???
I'm currently working on making a program that is run through a GUI run through the command line. The program basically takes an app file and a boot file and runs it through a bunch of functions and generates a new outfile. Anyway I'm new to C and can't figure out how to code it so I can type the two file paths into the command line and read them into the function. Is it possible to do this within the "if else" statement?
I tried the exercise 5 on page 312 of King's Book C programming A modern approach second edition. Write a program named sum.c that adds up its command line arguments which are assumed to be integers . Running the program by typing :
sum 8 24 62 should produce the following input
Total : 94
Use the atoi function to convert each command line argument from string form to integer form
My solution is :
Code:
#include<stdio.h> #include<stdlib.h> int main(int argc , char *argv[]) { int i , sum=0; }
[code]...
It is running good without problems but I am wondering because it is very small solution with few lines of code.
I have to make a c++ program, in which with an algorithm I have to code a text from a file and write it to another file. The input should like this: "code forCoding.txt toBeWritten.txt" ; or like this: "decode toBeReadFor.txt toBeWrittenIn". I have done everything except one thig: It is says I have to be able to input parameter.
How should i write this? I read [URL] ....., but still dont get. The input of my program has to have 3 strings, so I guess argc should be 3, but I dont really get it. What should I have in my main about this parsing command line parameters?
I am not sure how to enter command line arguments when I run the executable of the file below. I want check an make sure that only two arguments get into the main() before running the rest of the code. I'm using bash on linux.
An example that I have tried to test for 2 arguments in command line -arg1 arg2 > ./a.out This of course does not work
I know you go the the debugger and pass them in. I just need to know the syntax. I know &(ProjectDir) goes first because the text file is in the project directory but how do I pass the text file in as well. The file's name is "tester.txt".
I'm fairly new to C++ and have been understanding until Ive hit this rock. Im trying to figure out how to indicate whether or not a first command line argument interpreted as an integer is a multiple of the sum of its own digits. I understand that logic as if you type 20 = 2(2+0) where 2 is a multiple and 3113 = 8 which is not a multiple but i feel hopeless trying to set it up. And here is my code.
Code: #include <iostream> using namespace std; int main(int argc, char*argv[]) {
I stumbled into this forum in frustration as I tried to pass a string with both quotes and spaces into a single variable. I have looked up a couple places online, and even saw an old post here (Handling spaces in command line arguments) However, I still cannot seem to get the following string (in between the ---'s) to stay in one command line argument.
In the following program, I have gotten it to work with IO redirection (not shown in this particular code), and have made some minor adjustments to get it to work with file processing. The only thing I have to do now is get it to work with command line arguments, and am slightly lost (and I have looked into it).
I basically just need to take a text file from a certain directory and send it to my program. Would need two files, an input and output file.
I am designing a server program in C++ and now that everything works for the clients, I would like to implement a command line. The code waits for a connection with the predefined function "new_socket = accept(serversocket,(struct sockaddr *)&client,&addrsize);". I already made a function for the command line but I can't find a way (in my brain or on the web) to accept commands (getline) whilst no connection is accepted yet. (I mean wait for a connection. If no connection, then be ready to receive some arguments from the command line). Here is part of the code:
cout << "Waiting for connection/command..."; command_line_function(); //getline(cin,string) while(true){ new_socket = accept(serversocket,(struct sockaddr *)&client,&addrsize); if(new_socket == INVALID_SOCKET){ //INVALID_SOCKET is an error somehow. error_function();} cout << "ACCEPTED "; //etc. }
i would like to read the content of a text file data.txt (line by line ) directly from the command line using this command: a.exe < data.txt.
What could be the c++ code to read/get the content of these lines (without using ifstream). The treatment of the lines is not a problem for me but i really don't know how to access the content of the file from the c++ code