Basic and Advance C Question:
Download Job Interview Questions and Answers PDF
How can I invoke another program or command and trap its output?
Answer:
Unix and some other systems provide a popen function, which sets up a stdio stream on a pipe connected to the process running a command, so that the calling program can read the output (or alternatively supply the input). Using popen,
extern FILE *popen();
sprintf(cmdbuf, "sort < %s", datafile);
fp = popen(cmdbuf, "r");
/* ...now read sorted data from fp... */
pclose(fp);
(Do be sure to call pclose, as shown; leaving it out will seem to work at first but may eventually run you out of processes or file descriptors.)
If you can't use popen, you may be able to use system, with the output going to a file which you then open and read,
If you're using Unix and popen isn't sufficient, you can learn about pipe, dup, fork, and exec.
(One thing that probably would not work, by the way, would be to use freopen.)
extern FILE *popen();
sprintf(cmdbuf, "sort < %s", datafile);
fp = popen(cmdbuf, "r");
/* ...now read sorted data from fp... */
pclose(fp);
(Do be sure to call pclose, as shown; leaving it out will seem to work at first but may eventually run you out of processes or file descriptors.)
If you can't use popen, you may be able to use system, with the output going to a file which you then open and read,
If you're using Unix and popen isn't sufficient, you can learn about pipe, dup, fork, and exec.
(One thing that probably would not work, by the way, would be to use freopen.)
Download C Programming Interview Questions And Answers
PDF
Previous Question | Next Question |
How can my program discover the complete pathname to the executable from which it was invoked? | How do I get an accurate error status return from system on MS-DOS? |