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00:00
@DrorK. Somehow I forgot about freenode. thanks!
user2620028
   char input[100];	/* print to file or print to screen */
   char str1[100];
   char str2[100];
   strcpy(str1, "screen");
   strcpy(str2, "file");
   if (strcmp(input, str1) == 0) {
user2620028
Why is this equating to false no matter what the input is :/
Qix
Qix
@SeanAllred You don't advertise, other than appropriate channels.
Lol

> Joshua, you have 1 new notification
> A lot has happened on Facebook since you last logged in!

Thanks Facebook. The notification isn't even real; it's a ploy to get me to login and use Facebook.
helloc @HamZa
user2620028
00:26
does anyone know why my code is equating false there when i expect it to equate to true
@Qix The culture is different on TeX.SE :)
But this is your house – your rules. I get it :)
Qix
Qix
@SeanAllred Your thing has absolutely nothing to do with C. It's spam.
It's not a culture thing, it's a fact.
@Qix The overlap between C programmers and Emacs users isn't exactly negligible IMHO
Qix
Qix
@SeanAllred Doesn't matter :P
@Qix dude – I get that.
Qix
Qix
00:30
@HatterisMad Because input isn't set to anything.
You're comparing input to str1; your strcpy's are populating str1 and str2.
user2620028
i do have input set to user input
@Qix Call it culture shock, then.
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad Could also be, then, that new lines are an issue.
Without seeing how you're setting up input there's no real way to tell. :)
user2620028
sorry
fgets(input, 100, stdin);
user2620028
missed that line
Qix
Qix
00:32
It doesn't look like the line endings are removed.
Just for testing, add \n to strcpy(str1, "screen");
So strcpy(str1, "screen\n");
And if you're on windows, might need to change it to strcpy(str1, "screen\r\n");
Try just \n first.
user2620028
o.O
Qix
Qix
Does it work?
@Qix I always thought that most compilers would take care of the \n/\r\n business for you – am I mistaken?
Qix
Qix
@SeanAllred Yes :)
okay.jpg
Qix
Qix
00:34
Again, strings aren't magic. Line endings aren't either.
user2620028
the \n gave me the expected output now
user2620028
why does it think there is a new line at the end of my input?
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad Because there is.
user2620028
i suppose my question should be... why is there a new line at the end of my input lol
Nope, nothing in C is magic. You can pretty much always trace exactly what's going on :)
Qix
Qix
00:35
When you type screen<enter>, the string is screen\n
^ this has gotten me more times than I'd care to admit
Qix
Qix
fgets doesn't remove those for you; it simply stops collecting characters after it has found one.
user2620028
wow lol
user2620028
i figured but i wanted to hear it from you
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad Use strcspn() to easily find the end of the line, then set it to 0.
I believe you can do
user2620028
00:38
Actually
@Qix Actually when it comes to strings, \n is 'newline' and is translated properly according to the implementation/system
user2620028
The way i am half assing this assignment i am going to just leave the new line char at the end of my comparisons lmfao
Qix
Qix
input[strcspn(input, "\r\n")] = 0;
That'll fix your issue.
The only concern is when you try to manipulate its byte representation, and then you need to take care of system-specific cases
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. so fgets will ignore the \r\n in a windows-ending file?
and only return the \n?
00:39
"\n" under Windows is "\r\n"
(translated)
Qix
Qix
Yes, but they're stored as two characters.
So does fgets translate those two characters to a single \n?
Correct
Qix
Qix
Huh, interesting.
so when fgets reads hello\r\n from a file, the resulting buffer will contain hello\n\0?
No, the representation is implementation-specific
Think of representation of types
Windows is allowed to have 1 representation, another implementation is allowed to have a different one
But the 'abstraction' for both is the same
Qix
Qix
So the case I just mentioned would work on Windows but not Linux?
00:43
One moment, let me look for a link that demonstrate when the concern shows
Qix
Qix
kk
user2620028
hey guys what methods should i be looking for for c saving to file
user2620028
44
A: Write to .txt file?

user529758FILE *f = fopen("file.txt", "w"); if (f == NULL) { printf("Error opening file!\n"); exit(1); } /* print some text */ const char *text = "Write this to the file"; fprintf(f, "Some text: %s\n", text); /* print integers and floats */ int i = 1; float py = 3.1415927; fprintf(f, "Integer: %d...

user2620028
Yeah i meant write to file
Qix
Qix
00:54
Yep; those are the ones you want.
user2620028
shweet. This reminds me of learning java for the first time hahaha
@Qix I can't find this reference, it showed the case of using sockets/network and how now \n native representation would be significant and have to be handled 'manually'... same with integer representation/serialization and so
I'll brb
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. I can understand sockets since "end of packet" is arbitrary. I feel like you still have to check for \r\n when you read. I can't imagine the compiler doing anything magical with line endings.
1
A: Reading files with DOS line endings using fgets() on linux

stevehafgets() keeps line endings. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/c37dh6kf(v=vs.80).aspx fgets() itself doesn't have any special options for converting line endings, but on Windows, you can choose to either open a file in "binary" mode, or in "text" mode. In text mode Windows converts the CR...

So you can on Windows, it's just a different open mode.
So we're both right. lol
 
1 hour later…
user2620028
02:05
I have all things but one figured out in this assignment sigh
user2620028
oh hey whats up zach
user2620028
your last name every time i read it makes me think you are gonna act sassy
depends on the situation and who I'm talking to
user2620028
im typically always grumpy
02:08
that's no good
are you very good with C?
user2620028
not at all, i am sitting in here to get a little bit of help with c in fact
same :/
user2620028
what are you trying to do? lol
we're making our own shell - having trouble redirecting output when they enter >
user2620028
Oh also by the way i changed my username since you and i last talked. it used to be Aaron Siciliano
02:10
I see
user2620028
Windows shell?
command line shell
user2620028
you have fun with that lol
Qix
Qix
helloc @ZachSaucier;
02:16
hello
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier Looking through your codepen stuff.
Pretty impressive, to say the least.
thanks!
right now I am wishing my C skills were as good as my web skills
does dup2 stop execution for the process it's called in? I thought it just redirected stuff
user2620028
yeah zach has helped me out with his blogs let alone talking to me in so chats lol
I need to update my blog.... too bad I have an infinite amount of schoolwork
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier According to the man pages, it shouldn't.
Sounds like an underlying issue with how you're handling/wrapping it.
02:22
nvm, I found out what was happening
now I have to figure out how to fix it...
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier What's happening?
it's printing to a child's output (a text file) instead of the parent's output (the command line)
it works
thank goodness
that took way too long
Qix
Qix
Haha
is there a good way to add to a string array in C?
I initialize an empty one of size 10 using char array[10][100] and I want to add to it later on
in js I could do array.push(newVal)
@ZachSaucier No, it's common to use dynamic allocationing, such as with malloc()
Qix
Qix
02:32
^ That.
@DrorK. beats me to it every time >.>
@Qix Then next time I'll add a small delay :)
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier Javascript takes care of re-allocation under the hood. C doesn't have any quick way of doing what you're doing. :)
@DrorK. Please don't ;)
You answer things better than I do.
Actually most of the times I tend to complicate things
so I have to see how large the array is, use malloc to make room for another, then save the new string to that new space?
Everyone can simplify, it takes a real genius to over-complicate things!
@ZachSaucier It's easier not to use an array at the first place, once you have the required length- you allocate an object accordingly
Qix
Qix
02:36
@ZachSaucier Arrays can be dangerous in the sense that you're using them; if you write over the end of them, you'll get unexpected results.
If you don't really wish to dwell with such things I suppose you could look up "copy and paste" snippets for dealing with re-allocationing, "dynamic arrays" , "dynamic strings" and such
Qix
Qix
1. Check current length of array
2. If the new addition's size + the current size are greater than the current size, then
3. Reallocate with at least the new size (preferably more; realloc can be expensive IIRC)
4. Add
Ultimately what I'm trying to do with this part is to have background processes and keep track of the pid for any of those so that I can show them if the user asks to see which processes are running
I have it so it runs in the bg, I need to keep track of the pid of them
if there's an easier way than using dynamic strings for that, please let me know :P
Qix
Qix
Well a PID is going to be an int
So use ints ;)
Could you clarify what is going to be variable-length here?
02:39
the number of bg proccesses
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. The number of PIDs
same thing
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier use atoi on your PID strings, for one.
That way you're only managing an int array, which is going to be smaller and faster to work with.
Qix
Qix
Secondly, now your int* array should be malloc'd and then realloc'd in the event your cursor grows too large.
02:41
I'm surprised there's no common reference for a basic approach of a dynamic array
Let's google
Qix
Qix
Looks good; just skimmed it.
Here's a copy & paste one: fydo.net/gamedev/dynamic-arrays
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. That one looks like it'd leak. It doesn't care about the elements, so in using it just make sure you've disposed of the elements before freeing the array itself.
what is DATA?
generic type?
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier Whatever you want it to be.
typedef int DATA;
02:46
I see
Qix
Qix
Pointers are the same size, regardless of their pure types.
so sizeof(int*) == sizeof(SomeType*)
(waiting for @DrorK. to disagree with me...)
helloc all; // for a sec
Heh, it's not guaranteed by the standard
Qix
Qix
helloc @PeterVaro;
/me shoots at @PeterVaro
02:48
@DrorK. what do you mean, do I like or not?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. In practice that's generally the case though.
@PeterVaro I dunno, you tell me
@DrorK. why? why? why?
I dunno, shooting seemed appropriate :)
02:49
We should add more 'tools' to the channel's language
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. In other news, Israel is now in a vicious war with Hungary.
Shotguns, firearms, crossbows, etc
@Qix It was just a friendly fire... :)
umm.. about that comment style => I like it, although I think I have a better comment formatting pattern ;)
do thing I don't like is: 1) the trailing */ at the end in a new line
Qix
Qix
I'm having an issue that I can't seem to fix.
2) the space before the * in every new line
my style is this:
Qix
Qix
02:50
static_assert(sizeof(my_genetalia) >= 3, ":(");
Keeps evaluating to false :(
/* Some comment
   More lines here
   and then some here
   and this is the end */
@Qix Maybe GCC 5.0 would sort it out?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. God I hope so.
goto eat; // brb
so much trouble
just to add an int to an int array
jó étvágyat @Qix
:)
02:52
@ZachSaucier Feel free to ask follow up questions or share pastes
@PeterVaro Is there a common reference for a basic dynamic array via malloc/realloc?
I don't think so -- I can show mine.. but that's not 1) common 2) not "official" :)
Is it basic enough?
it is basic, but it has tons of methods
not only the basic ones
@PeterVaro A simple 'no' would suffice :)
02:56
@ZachSaucier Have a go at the one I googled, it's relatively generic and basic
I am, just trying to figure out if I can do it without the DATA struct
@ZachSaucier It seems to me that 'DATA' represents the type of the object, it doesn't have to be a struct
Might as well typedef it to anything you'd like
@DrorK. and @ZachSaucier how 'bout this: happybearsoftware.com/implementing-a-dynamic-array.html ?
(the struct is merely an example)
02:59
@PeterVaro more complex than I need
umm.. okay => what do you need then?
I'm trying the one Dror linked
@PeterVaro Btw, have you seen Julia Louis-Dreyfus's performance/character at Veep?
I read that comment of yours, and I didn't even knew who JLD was
WHOA
03:04
so I googled her => still nothing
And you asked why I was shooting at you?!
:D:D:D
/me looking for the shotgun
So I guess you're not a Seinfeld fan
Her performance on Seinfeld... was so bad I thought she was an amateur... but here, she's a true performer
that worked pretty well, thanks @DrorK.
now I have to remove the necessary pid when the child ends... Signal time
@ZachSaucier Sure, are you practicing C for the long haul, or just for this specific course/exercise?
03:07
for my systems programming course
(I dislike this type of programming)
I see... so you're not one of us...
If I'm customizing my own PC or something, cool
otherwise I'll stick to web :D
or mobile (which I do in a web way)
my gyros has arrived ;)
goto eat;
03:08
What do you mean by 'web'? Any specific language?
CSS/JS mostly
@PeterVaro Gyros? Balls? Engines?
my forte is CSS
gyros = food
Really? Is it a type of food?
they're delicious
making me hungry...
03:10
The picture looks good, not sure what's inside though...
the standard is what you see
different places/recipes have various things though
It seems like it resembles 'Shawarma'
@DrorK. for removing an int from an array, I know I can check it by iterating through each and checking the value, but how do I actually remove it? array[i] = NULL?
Removing is a different story
@DrorK. from the images that looks more crispy/less thick outside like a burrito
03:13
You could use a sentinel value to represent 'removed'/'deleted'
I'll probably do that
But if you would like the array to shrink, it would require to shift all the following entries backwards
nahhh
I'll just use -1 or something
user2620028
03:25
When using fprintf in a for loop i have 4 iterations and my output file only shows the last one, is it overwriting what exists in the file each time it loops?
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I'm so sorry in advance, but every time I see cutils I read "clits"
:(
user2620028
lmao
Qix
Qix
Also, @PeterVaro, stdbool.h doesn't exist on some compilers (namely MSVC, IIRC). I ran into this issue the other day
@ZachSaucier Are you in here for a particular homework assignment, or are you learning C for the long-haul?
hw assignment to create a shell
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier I see :)
03:32
so many parts to add T_T
I hope next projects won't take this long
@Qix That's the thing about being non-standard... you don't have standard-headers :)
Qix
Qix
Haha
@DrorK. ;)
@Qix Did we both ask Zach the same question?
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Idk, did we?
@DrorK. HAHAHAHAH
03:35
"are you practicing C for the long haul, or just for this specific course/exercise?"
Qix
Qix
We used the same terminology too
/epic
@ZachSaucier Awesome assignment, though. Kudos to your professor.
But you didn't do the most important part, the hostile response: "I see... so you're not one of us..."
Qix
Qix
@DrorK. Hehehe
I should write my own shell...
Hmm...
Nah I have way too many projects on my hands.
getting a weird behavior now
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier Welcome to native programming :)
03:37
takes several exit calls to leave my shell, lol
@ZachSaucier How far your shell is going to go? How about >() sub-redirections?
must be something wrong with my signal, but I have no idea what
still have the yellow ones, kill, and pipes to do (though I have pipes mostly done)
Qix
Qix
Nice
side note; nothing more weird than typing man jobs in your terminal.
Qix
Qix
._.
or man cat, man kill
etc.
03:40
>& <-- I think my bash just recently added that ;)
oooh (I think I know why this is happening)
noooo :( it's not
I have to reactivate signals when they're used, right?
inside of the handler?
like signal(SIGCHLD, handler); .... handler(int signum) { signal(SIGCHILD, handler); } ?
Qix
Qix
@ZachSaucier Not that I'm aware.
hmmm
wonder where I got that idea
Qix
Qix
0
Q: (Why) does raise reset the signal handler?

Martin BaIt would appear that the implementation of raise(sig) resets the handler installed with signal(sig, handlerFunction), that is, in a multithreaded program, the first thread to call abort() will call the custom handlerFunction, but if any other threads then calls abort, this other thread will just ...

You're correct, in fact.
at least, on windows.
so I should use sigaction to save me the trouble of doing that then, I suppose
still getting this weird behavior....
it's requiring that I call exit several times before it actually exits my shell
registers the command and such, just doesn't exit fully
must have nested it somehow...
Qix
Qix
03:57
Hmm
it happens when I do the jobs command
my guess is that it's trying to do the built in jobs function using execvp
so weird
I'm making sure to prevent the execvp if it's jobs, but it still makes me exit an extra time for each jobs call
got it
Qix
Qix
What was the issue?
it was forking weirdly for it, not sure exactly. Just prevented forking at all for the jobs call
Qix
Qix
I see
Qix
Qix
04:29
@DrorK. are variadic functions slow?
@Qix Actually I'm not aware of any such concern
Is there something severe you're experiencing?
Qix
Qix
No, I'm just wondering.
I'm trying to think of a good way to have a variable-sized argument
If I know the argument size some otherway, but passing it in using a variadic function
And have it work for any arbitrary type
Are you referring strictly to the number of arguments, or you take multiple types into consideration too?
Qix
Qix
There will always be 1 argument.
I suppose some sort of 'struct packing' as argument serialization?
Qix
Qix
04:38
size_t elem_size = sizeof(some_struct);
void foo(...) {
    // Doesn't know the internal type
    // Still gets the argument based on its size
}
some_struct s;
foo(s);
Hmm
actually...
could do
If it can't parse the types/arguments, what do you expect 'foo' to do?
It sounds like you're describing an opaque type, not a va_list
Qix
Qix
No
I want to do something like
F*****G G*D D****T
user2620028
lol whaaat
Qix
Qix
So my muscle memory to fix something in my text coming from ViM made me hit escape, which cleared the chat box
You can't Ctrl+Z that.
DUMB.
I guess i'll need to use pointers >.>
Trying to get too clever here.
04:56
We are the united states of america, because we're united, we are stated, and of america
:)
Veep is awesome

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