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00:23
2
Q: Calling kill on a child process with SIGTERM terminates parent process, but calling it with SIGKILL keeps the parent alive

AR7This is a continuation of How to prevent SIGINT in child process from propagating to and killing parent process? In the above question, I learned that SIGINT wasn't being bubbled up from child to parent, but rather, is issued to the entire foreground process group, meaning I needed to write a s...

 
10 hours later…
10:52
Hey any activity here?
char arr[2];

if(!fgets(arr, sizeof(arr), stdin))
{
perror("fgets error\n");
exit(1);
}

c = arr[0];
For some reason, when I press enter after an input, I need to press enter again
Then it consumes just a newline...
11:05
A question: why not just getchar?
11:16
Tried it before, and got me into deep shit
I does not clear stdin for one reason
this should run in a loop
fgets a char is totally fine, I just need to know why it does not respond to enter
Clear stdin?
You mean read the rest of a line before next?
fgets clears stdin I thought
fgets reads until a newline or eof, or until buflen - 1 characters have been read. port70.net/~nsz/c/c11/n1570.html#7.21.7.2p2
lets be a little practical here
I ask for a char, I get this with fgets. A newline is of course pressed
then in a while loop I ask again for a char
11:32
You've practically not presented your loop.
Which probably is the source of your issues. The code presented reads a single char during a single run just fine, though it leaves the rest of the input stream intact, since the buffer is filled before a newline is read.
> The fgets function reads at most one less than the number of characters specified by n from the stream pointed to by stream into the array pointed to by s.
Hence the newline is not read, but left in the stream and read on the next run.
char arrx[2];

if(!fgets(arrx, sizeof(arrx), stdin))
{
perror("fgets error\n");
exit(1);
}

char c = arrx[0];


int num_of_loops = 0;

int go = 1;

while(go)
{




if(num_of_loops > 0)
{
printf("Here are the available options:\n");
printf("1: Get ONE job from server\n");
printf("2: Get X jobs from server\n");
printf("3: Get all jobs from server\n");
printf("4: Terminate program\n");

char arr[2];

if(!fgets(arr, sizeof(arr), stdin))
{
perror("fgets error\n");
exit(1);
}

c = arr[0];


}

if(c == EOF)
shitty indentation,sorry
num of loops is inside the while, so it will go into the if statement on second run
So yeppers, you have that fgets arrx first
Is it wrong?
Which reads a single char from stdin and leaves the rest in the stream, newline or no newline
So the next fgets will read just a newline
But a character+newline should fit into [2]
Right?
11:40
No
Or is there a null here?
> The fgets function reads at most one less than the number of characters specified by n from the stream pointed to by stream into the array pointed to by s.
Gotcha mate
So basically I should make the array bigger?
You forget that fgets reads c-strings, so it has to add the '\0' char at the end
I'd say go for the portable solution found here: stackoverflow.com/a/7898516/2681632
I really hate hate hate c when it comes to input
from stdin
1 million solutions, and 999 000 are deprecated
11:42
Another thing, if(c == EOF) is never going to be true when using fgets
No official modern guide
How should I check for eof?
Well, that's a bit tricky, again :P
haha
And I must admit I'm not entirely sure what is the 99,9% proper solution
Since fgets does not add EOF in to the buffer when read (unlike a newline).
You have 2 situations regarding EOF: There are characters to be read before the EOF or not.
In the former case it reads those characters in to the buffer and returns the buffer pointer
In the latter case the buffer is untouched and it returns NULL
But as you probably know already, NULL is returned on error as well
fgets returns null on eof
apparently
11:46
So I guess you have to check if it returns NULL and then check whether it was an error or eof
But please don't quote me on that
okay
So ferror and feof
After receiving NULL from fgets
Right.
Thank you so much!
I find it strange that there has been no official development regarding input from stdin in c
Making it easier
Like a scanner in java
Use readline.
12:04
That (if available)
 
3 hours later…
14:43
-1
Q: Unity plugin not working in OpenGL 4.1, working with OpenGL 2.1

Bas TuijnmanI have a question regarding a small Unity plugin I'm writing. The plugin takes a Unity3D Texture2D and tries to update it, the compiled plugin works when running Unity3D with -force-opengl (to run in OpenGL 2.1), but it's not working when running in normal mode (OpenGL 4.1). Is there anything t...

 
3 hours later…
17:39
You think You know C? Short quiz :D
err wat
oh
18:23
@Kamiccolo seriously?
main(){
  return sizeof(*(&s));
}
^ what the hell is this? he is returning a value without explicitly declaring the function to return one?
not to mention the empty parens, or the fact that sizeof is evaluating to size_t, which can ofc be greater than an int which should be the return value of the main function
@PeterVaro yeah... :/ but that... makes the answer even clearer :D I guess, it's noted in the comment section, that only on C90 it was legal to omit the return type.
18:45
@Kamiccolo but that is just so amatuer, I mean, he clearly wanted to give everyone a lesson, how difficult C can be under the surface, yet he fails to mention, which standard we are talking about, etc.
@PeterVaro yup, details are definitely lacking. And it kind a... contradicts the experience the author mentions.
that's why I said this to @DrorK., that we should create a very cool "So you think, you know C, don't you?" kind of quiz, which will solve these kind of problems

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