_argc & _argv
Paul Garceau
pgarceau@teleport.com
Tue Aug 1 18:40:00 GMT 2000
On 1 Aug 2000, at 21:26, the Illustrious DJ Delorie wrote:
>
> > More specifically, is argc, argv defined with or w/o leading
> > underscores for Cygwin when it comes to defining them for a
> > main() routine?
> >
> > csMain (argc, argv); (Cygwin?)
>
> They're parameter names. You can call them anything you want.
> You could call them "quagmire" and "felicity" if you want.
Ok...now that it has been made fundamentally clear that I can't
pull teeth from a hen...let me once again rephrase the
question...
What is the "internal representation" of argc, argv for Cygwin?
For mingw32 it is as follows:
(excerpt from stdlib.h)
/*
* This seems like a convenient place to declare these variables, which
* give programs using WinMain (or main for that matter) access to main-ish
* argc and argv. environ is a pointer to a table of environment variables.
* NOTE: Strings in _argv and environ are ANSI strings.
*/
extern int _argc;
extern char** _argv;
What is used for Cygwin? Cygwin does mean Cygnus for Win32,
does it not?
Thanks,
Paul G.
>
Nothing real can be threatened.
Nothing unreal exists.
--
Want to unsubscribe from this list?
Send a message to cygwin-unsubscribe@sourceware.cygnus.com
More information about the Cygwin
mailing list