David C. Rankin

Oct 22, 2023 12:22
No worries, I have no dog in this fight. You can solve the problem any way you like. However, after working with C and inline-assembly for a number of years, it is an unforgiving route to take. If you have a rust executable that does what you want, why not just call it with popen() if you can submit your project containing more than 1 executable. Just brainstorming ideas that may work given the content of your question. Please provide a A Minimal Complete Reproducable Example to receive specific help.
Oct 22, 2023 12:22
"For an university course I write some c/c++ programs which are then sent to an online judge and tested on inputs." ??
Oct 22, 2023 12:22
Why not just learn how to write a robust input routine in C or C++ to begin with? There are many good examples on this site of how to handle all forms of input in the proper way and the error handling needed to gracefully respond to any invalid input provided. That seems a much better use of your time instead of trying to cobble inline assembly from rust into a C source. Inline-assembly itself is full of pitfalls for the unwary. If you actually provided sample input you need to handle, we could actually point you in the right direction.
 
Feb 22, 2023 15:31
pIfList = NULL; and (WLAN_INTERFACE_INFO *)&pIfList->InterfaceInfo[1]; equals BOOM! SegFault. It appears you are missing a step between them. Though, you need to know what PWLAN_INTERFACE_INFO_LIST actually is to help make sense of the expression. Make sure you are compiling with -Wall -Wextra -pedantic -Werror for full warnings and to treat warnings as errors. Post the warnings/errors which will help your question be answered. Also note, you are not creating the error dialog in your code -- which means you code crashed and windows generated the dialog.
 
Dec 2, 2022 22:35
Okay, no strange shell, bash, so your tilde expansion at the command line should work fine.
Dec 2, 2022 22:35
What happens if you paste x11vnc -nap -wait 30 -noxdamage .... on the command line outside the script? Does it execute correctly? If it does, your problem appears to be your use of '~' in ~/x11vnc.sh. The '~' expansion is only replaced by /home/you in certain circumstances. Better to use $HOME in scripts instead. Also post the output of echo $SHELL
 
Sep 27, 2022 06:09
Effectively register is a holdover from a much earlier time in C when it was intended to mean keep the value in a CPU register so that access is as fast as possible. However, the C standard does not mandate any particular behavior for its use today -- but notes many circumstances where its use will result in undefined behavior. It is current left to the implementation whether there is any special treatment for it, it's use is largely discouraged. See C18 - 6.7.1 Storage-class specifiers(p6)
 
Jun 18, 2022 22:19
Where "a" means "append". You can remove the fseek() call in "a" mode.
Jun 18, 2022 22:17
If you want to "update" the text file, (and not overwrite it) each time, open in "a" mode instead of "w" mode. man 3 fopen
Jun 18, 2022 10:47
I added the extra example showing how to use the struct and how to qsort() on name ascending. For descending, you can simply reverse the order of x->date and y->date in the strcmp() function. Ill let you work on this a bit -- it's way past my nap time. Good luck with your coding. I'll check back when I get up.
Jun 18, 2022 10:33
I'd make the struct global, I'll show you why in my next example I add to your answer.
Jun 18, 2022 10:14
There is a LOT involved conceptually in filling the array of struct, and writing the qsort() compare function. The actual call to sort the array with qsort() is trivial at that point. None if this is hard, you just take it step by step and you will do fine. There are many "qsort array of struct" answers on this site that can help.
Jun 18, 2022 10:11
Sorting date as a string is perfect with yyyy/mm/dd formatted dates.
Jun 18, 2022 10:11
You will replace your char name[MAXC]; char category[MAXC]; ... with the struct task { char name[MAXC]; char category[MAXC]; ... }; and then you can do struct task arr[50] = {{0}}; and the {{0}} will initialize all the structs zero. Then you will keep a counter for the index (say int n = 0; to begin). Then while (n < 50 && (another[0] == 'Y'|| another[0] == 'y')) { read into arr[n].name ... and at the end of the loop, do n++; so your read the next task into the next index.
Jun 18, 2022 10:03
Jun 18, 2022 09:58
Okay, this is where you need to think struct. Create a struct task { char name[MAXC]; char category[MAXC]; ... } that will allow you to treat all of the information in a task as one object. Then you can create an array of struct task and sort by the date member. You will want to use qsort to sort anything you sort in C. I'll find a link for you.
Jun 18, 2022 09:45
I have a short example I'll drop back in the answer when we are done here. What is the other issue?
Jun 18, 2022 09:32
Yes, and change ALL your inputs to fgets(). scanf() is so full of pitfalls for the new C programmer -- you are just asking for grief (and you are getting it). fgets() will consume a whole line of input on each read, no need for getchar() after fgets().
Jun 18, 2022 09:32
Your missing char issue looks related to all the unnecessary getchar(); calls. Mixing scanf() and fgets() is killing you.
Jun 18, 2022 09:32
Also, unless you are using cl.exe (the Microsoft compiler), fflush(stdin); invokes Undefined Behavior according to the C-standard. Unless you are using VS, remove that line -- it doesn't do what you think it does.
Jun 18, 2022 09:32
It shouldn't, (unless you entered "Math,ath") but can you see what is wrong with fgets(name,50,stdin); and your definition of char name[20];? Check the amount you are reading into each of your buffers. You should include a '\n' at the end of "%s,%s,%s,%s,%s\n" in fprintf(fptr,"%s,%s,%s,%s,%s", name, category, info, date, status);
Jun 18, 2022 09:32
You write it after each call to fgets(), e.g. fgets(name,50,stdin); then name[strcspn (name, "\n")] = 0; and then after fgets(category,50,stdin); do category[strcspn (category, "\n")] = 0; and so on.
 
Jan 26, 2022 16:41
See also the answer to How to convert char* to wchar_t*? for C++ wide-string use. (C++11 or later)
Jan 26, 2022 16:41
Wherever the filename is char * (or any const qualified variant), you need to convert to wide-character. There are two basic options (1) using swprintf() as above, or (2) calling setlocale() and then converting with mbstowcs(). If you need filename as wide-character to open a wide-character file (and nowhere else), then put the array and conversion with swprintf() right before you open the file. (or use mbstowcs())
Jan 26, 2022 16:41
I'm concerned with (const W_CHAR*)filename if filename is a simple char* type. I don't do a lot with wchar, but it looks like you need a wide-char string, e.g. wchar_t wfilename[512]; (size as needed) and then swprintf(wfilename, 512, L"%hs", filename); and then open with wfilename.
Jan 26, 2022 16:41
Show the declaration and initialization of out_file. Which would be included in A Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable Example (MCVE).
 
Jan 18, 2022 01:56
Chuckling, still actively practicing... The funny part is we have had discussions on the site about 6.5 (6&7) and there are times you can wind yourself around an axle arriving at agreement on what the effective-type is. Add memcpy and memmove with the source being void* and the fun starts. You come away with the same certainty as the rule the courts apply to pornography ("I'll know it when I see it..."). What is there works great for discussion, but I've always thought it would benefit from a bit more clarity with regard to "effective type".
Jan 18, 2022 01:56
Can I suggest a re-write of section 6.5 though you :)
 
Dec 24, 2021 09:48
You got a deal!
Dec 24, 2021 09:48
Good luck with your scripting.
Dec 24, 2021 09:47
No worries, just frustrated. I've been scripting for 20+ years and it is frustrating to the stumped by differing dates ....
Dec 24, 2021 09:45
Grrr... I'll have to follow up in the morning -- I'm out of ammo. I'll go mark my answer as GNU date and set it inactive for now.
Dec 24, 2021 09:42
The date command is the start of the line following by $start_date.
Dec 24, 2021 09:41
Make that date $start_date for the first of the 2 lines
Dec 24, 2021 09:36
(you can just comment the current start_date line out with #)
Dec 24, 2021 09:35
Let's do this in 2-lines instead of one. Remove the current command that sets start_date and add these two lines date "$start_date" and next line start_date=$(date -v +1d '+%y-%m-%d')
Dec 24, 2021 09:32
Taking the current date makes sense -- that is what date does by default. The problem is what do I have to do to tell it to use another date instead of the current one. That's where I was looking at -j -f Let me read further in the man page.
Dec 24, 2021 09:29
I don't think quoting is the issue, though you could try removing the double-quotes.
Dec 24, 2021 09:29
You made sure you had the -v +1d that I forgot the first time? I thought providing -j -f "yy-mm-dd" "$start_date" would set the date to the desired date in start_date. If that's not happening, I'm confused on how to tell Mac date which date to use...
Dec 24, 2021 09:26
@newbiecoder - change the date command to start_date=$(date -v "$start_date +1d" '+%y-%m-%d') Let me know if that works on the Mac from date(1) OSX man page
Dec 24, 2021 09:26
@newbiecoder - it looks like start_date=$(date -j -f "yy-mm-dd" "$start_date" -v +1d '+%y-%m-%d') will work I wish I had a Mac to test on. (sorry, forgot the -v)
Dec 24, 2021 09:26
Okay, you have Mac date command. Give me a second and I'll update the question.
 
May 9, 2021 08:19
I'm interested as well in if there is any such animal...
May 9, 2021 08:18
I think it boils down to what you end up with after you "link". If you want to "statically linked against c/c++ standard libraries" -- then you end up with the output of the linker, not compiler. So what you have is in the form of the final executable, not library. Leave the question open for a while and see if you get so other deep magic I'm simply unaware of, but I don't think you can do what you are wanting to do.
May 9, 2021 07:49
The result would be linked directly against the c/c++ standard libraries. But that is more in creating a final executable that creating a library.
May 9, 2021 07:49
Understand when you create an object file (that can be a part of a static lib) it is already compiled against c/c++ standard libraries. It is the linker step that determines the static linkage. Yes, you can create your library and link directly against the C runtime and libc. That is discussed under the OPTIONS section of man 1 ld.
May 9, 2021 07:48
"is it possible to create a static library my_math.lib that statically links against c/c++ libraries?" Now I'm confused. If you don't want to create a -static library from my_math.o and you don't want to create a shared-object library. Are you wanting to dynamically load the static library at runtime? If so, that's a no-go, and the answer is here dynamically loading static library?
May 9, 2021 07:48
Ohhh... We have been talking about different things. If you just have a separate source file with functions and you are calling that a "library", there is nothing special required. You can simply compile and link that at the same time, e.g. gcc -o my_program hello.c goodbye.c done. Or you can compile goodbye.c to object with gcc -c -o goodbye.o goodbye.c and then link that will hello as gcc -o my_prog hello.c goodbye.o