Hello I'm using CodeLite on Linux. When I use system("cls");, system("pause>0"); or something like that, I get sh: 1: cls: not found error.
I did a search by myself and I realise these commands are for Windows.
Does someone know where can I find the equivalent commands for Linux?
The system() function what does is opening a new console tab with the command you introduce by parameters. So system("cls") will open a new console and do the cls command. As you said, cls is a Windows command, so you need to change it to the equivalent command in Linux: clear. So, to make the functions system("cls") work on Linux, you should use system("clear").
For the other options you're asking, it's the same, you just need to search for the equivalent commands in Linux.
Finally, it's important to know these kinds of functions aren't very recommendable, cause they made your code work only for a specific SO. You should search for libraries that have functions that do the same and can help make your code portable.
Related
I just tried to get tui up and it said:
Cannot enable the TUI when output is not a terminal
Which I though was odd because I thought I had it up before. Turns out it worked when I was using cmd but doesn't work using mintty.exe. The bash shell says that TERM=xterm. I also tried some other vt terminals without success. So I'm thinking that gdb isn't respecting the TERM variable.
Anyone know anything about this?
The source code for GDB (line 380 of the linked source) uses stderr.isatty() to check whether the output file (in this case MinTTY) is a terminal or not. However, this check fails using MSYS/MinGW because, according to the developer of MinTTY,
Quoting from mingw.org: “MinGW … is a minimalist development environment for native Microsoft Windows applications.”
Native Windows means no tty.
Looking at this patch suggests that a workaround may be to unset the $TERM variable to enable the native Windows console driver (rather than using a Unix tty). So try unset TERM to see if that will resolve the issue.
Since everything is 32-bit, I used :set makeprg=mingw32-make, and then tried compiling via :!make, which gave the following error message:
'make' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.
shell returned 1
I tried the basic "Goodbye World" stuff:
#include <iostream>
int main() {
std::cout << "Goodbye World";
return 0;
}
What am I doing wrong? Other than being a noob.
:!make doesn't run 'makeprg'. It runs make. Since you are specifically trying to run mingw32-make.exe, presumably you don't have an executable named make.exe. (See :help :!)
:make runs 'makeprg'. (See :help :make, :help 'makeprg')
my goal is to see the "Goodbye World" either in console or terminal or any observable way. Would this require additional tinkering to the _vimrc file?
You would rather want to do it by tinkering with your makefile. Any arguments to :make will be passed to 'makeprg'. If you defined targets clean (to remove the Make artefacts) or run (to execute the product of your Make), you will be able to write :mak clean or :mak run in Vim to run those targets. Obviously, you can create your own commands and/or mappings to make those :make commands faster.
Note (and I completely overlooked this myself, silly me) that when you run a simple code, such as the one above, that does not need extensive file managements and Makefiles, all you need to go is :!gcc % for C and :!g++ % for C++. I believe (and I may be wrong, but this is a simple observation) that in Vim, :! indicates the following commands are to be executed in the system Command Prompt, and gcc/g++ is the command to invoke the GNU Compiler for C and C++ respectively. Finally, % is used to indicate the current filename, with all extensions intact. This is extremely useful in cases of keymapping, as I have done via the following:
nnoremap <F5> :!g++ %<CR>|"Press Func.5 to Compile via GNU Comp.
I recently decided to start teaching myself C++ and thought a simple encryption project would be a good place to start, since it covers most of the basics (cout, cin, opening files, etc). Is there a way to have the code open a terminal window similar to the one opened when I compile and run from sublime text?
I have tried this so far, but it hasn't changed anything.
string cmd = "gnome-terminal-x sh-c 'ls-l; exec bash'";
system(cmd.c_str());
Essentially, I would like to be able to run the program by clicking the .exe, and have the terminal where all of the input and output goes pop up.
You don't need to write any code, you just need to configure the shortcut to launch the program in a terminal. Here's a Gnome dialog that shows that option:
Problem seems to be gnome-terminal, or then just my failure to give it the right arguments. For example gnome-terminal -x sh -c 'ls -l ; exec bash' from command line in another terminal just opens an empty gnome-terminal and spits out a bunch of glib warnings to original terminal... (Note to readers: if you can give the right command that works for gnome-terminal, please let me know in comments or just edit this paragraph.)
However, using xterm works, for example xterm -e sh -c 'ls -l; exec bash', or a line for your code:
string cmd = "xterm -e sh -c 'ls -l; exec bash'";
As a side note, the command to open the default x terminal window of the DE is x-terminal-emulator, but it quite often has the practical problem of different terminals taking different arguments, so sadly you're probably better of using a specific terminal, like that xterm, and requiring that to be installed, or letting user to configure what terminal to use, with what arguments (though letting user to specify any command to be run can also be a security risk, if user is not always trusted).
Just be very careful with escaping. For example, when you test the command form command line, and then copy-paste it to C++ string literal, you need to escape every " and \ one more time for C++. If you have trouble with this, check out C++11 raw strings.
Escaping becomes extra important if you construct the command string at runtime, and especially if you accept user input and add that to the string. In that case, better search for and use some existing library like GLib, or sanitize the user input very carefully (ie. just paranoidically reject anything with chars, which may have a special meaning in shell in some context).
If you are actually asking, how can my program open a console window for itself similar to how Windows console programs behave, and redirect it's own stdin, stdout and stderr there, as if it was launched from command line, that that is not very easy from the same binary, and it is not commonly done like that in Unix.
If you want a behaviour like that, you could create a desktop shortcut, but more general way is to write a wrapper shell script, which starts your binary in a terminal. What kind of script exactly, depends on how you want it to behave exactly: what will it do with stdio, will it return or wait for program to exit, how do you want it to find the binary, how does it behave when run from command line instead of double-clicking from GUI, etc.
I want to use diff in Windows, so the cygwin is a way.
But I want to call it in the C++.
Is this possible? If yes how to do it?
If you just want to access a command line utility try looking into system function in C++. It spawns a shell that executes the command line utility in it. So if you have an executable that does the function of diff place it in the system path and the you are done. i think diff.exe comes along with strawberry perl(correct me if i am wrong)
Currently I'm trying to start programming on my new Mac. I installed TextWrangler, and chose C++ as my language of choice; since I have some prior knowledge of it, from when I used Windows.
So, I wrote the ever so common "Hello World" program. Although, when I tried to run it, I got an error:
"This file doesn’t appear to contain a valid ‘shebang’ line (application error code: 13304)"
I tried searching the error code to find out how to fix this, but I couldn't find anything.. I have no idea what a 'shebang' line is... Can someone help me out?
You need to compile it with a compiler first. I assume you tried to run the source file like ./source but C++ doesn't work this way.
With some compilers however, you can provide a shebang-line as the first line of the source file (the #! is known as shebang or crunchbang, hence the name), like so:
#!/path/to/compiler
So that the shell knows what application is used to run that sort of file, and when you attempt to run the source file by itself, the compiler will compile and run it for you. That's a compiler-dependent feature though, so I recommend just plain compiling with G++ or whatever Macs use to get an executable, then run that.
While I wouldn't recommend it for regular C++ development, I'm using a simple shell script wrapper for small C++ utilities. Here is a Hello World example:
#if 0 // -- build and run wrapper script for C++ ------------------------------
TMP=$(mktemp -d)
c++ -o ${TMP}/a.out ${0} && ${TMP}/a.out ${#:1} ; RV=${?}
rm -rf ${TMP}
exit ${RV}
#endif // ----------------------------------------------------------------------
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
std::cout << "Hello world" << std::endl;
return 0;
}
It does appear that you are trying to run the source file directly, however you will need to compile using a C++ compiler, such as that included in the gcc (GNU Compiler Collection) which contains the C++ compiler g++ for the Mac. It is not included with the Mac, you have to download it first:
from http://www.tech-recipes.com/rx/726/mac-os-x-install-gcc-compiler/ : "To install the gcc compiler, download the xcode package from http://connect.apple.com/. You’ll need to register for an Apple Developer Connection account. Once you’ve registered, login and click Download Software and then Developer Tools. Find the Download link next to Xcode Tools (version) – CD Image and click it!"
Once it's installed, if you are going for a quick Hello World, then, from a terminal window in the directory of your source file, you can execute the command g++ HelloWorld.cpp -o HelloWorld. Then you should be able to run it as ./HelloWorld.
Also, if you're coming from a Visual Studio world, you might want to give Mono and MonoDevelop a try. Mono is a free implementation of C# (and other languages), and MonoDevelop is an IDE which is very similar to Visual Studio. MonoDevelop supports C# and other .NET languages, including Visual Basic .NET, as well as C/C++ development. I have not used it extensively, but it does seem to be very similar to VS, so you won't have to learn new everything all in a day. I also have used KDevelop, which I liked a lot while I was using it, although that's been a while now. It has a lot of support for GNU-style development in C/C++, and was very powerful as I recall.
Good luck with your endeavors!
Links:
Mono: http://mono-project.com/Main_Page
MonoDevelop: http://monodevelop.com/
KDevelop: http://kdevelop.org/
shebang is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shebang_%28Unix%29.
not sure why your program is not running. you will need to compile and link to make an executable.
What I find confusing (/interesting) is C++ program giving "Shebang line" error. Shebang line is a way for the Unix like operating system to specify which program should be used to interpret the rest of the file. The shebang line usually points to the path of the interpreter. C++ is a compiled language and does not have interpreter for it.
To get the real technical details of how shebang lines work, do a man execve and get that man page online here - man execve.
If you're on a mac then doing something like this on the commandline:
g++ -o program program.cpp
Will compile and link your program into an executable called program. Then you can run it like:
./program
The reason you got the 'shebang' error is probably because you tried to run the cpp file like:
./program.cpp
And the shell tries to find an interpreter to run the code in the file. Because this is C++ there is no relevant interpreter but if your file contains Python or Bash then having a line like this
#!/usr/bin/python
at the 1st line in your source file will tell the shell to use the python interpreter
The lines that start with a pattern like this: #!/.../.../.. is called a shebang line. In other words, a shebang is the character sequence consisting of the characters number sign and exclamation mark (#!).In Unix-like operating systems, when a text file with a shebang is used as if it is an executable, the program loader mechanism parses the rest of the file's initial line as an interpreter directive. The loader executes the specified interpreter program, passing to it as an argument the path that was initially used when attempting to run the script, so that the program may use the file as input data.