view src/prefix-args.c @ 21437:a2a8f6772465

(jdb): Do proper analysis of classes defined in a Java source. This removes the restriction of one class per file. (gud-jdb-package-of-file): Removed. Replaced with parsing routines. (gud-jdb-skip-whitespace): New function. (gud-jdb-skip-single-line-comment): New function. (gud-jdb-skip-traditional-or-documentation-comment): New function. (gud-jdb-skip-whitespace-and-comments): New function. (gud-jdb-skip-id-ish-thing): New function. (gud-jdb-skip-string-literal): New function. (gud-jdb-skip-character-literal): New function. (gud-jdb-skip-block): New function. (gud-jdb-analyze-source): New function. (gud-jdb-build-class-source-alist-for-file): New function. (gud-jdb-analysis-buffer): New variable. (gud-jdb-build-class-source-alist): Cleaner at the expense of new variable.
author Karl Heuer <kwzh@gnu.org>
date Wed, 08 Apr 1998 19:07:45 +0000
parents 763c253911c3
children fa9ff387d260
line wrap: on
line source

/* prefix-args.c - echo each argument, prefixed by a string.
   Jim Blandy <jimb@occs.cs.oberlin.edu> - September 1992

   When using GCC 2 as the linker in the build process, options
   intended for the linker need to be prefixed with the "-Xlinker"
   option.  If an option takes an argument, we need to use -Xlinker
   twice - once for the option and once for its argument.  For
   example, to run the linker with the options "-Bstatic" "-e"
   "_start", you'd need to pass the following options to GCC:

   -Xlinker -Bstatic -Xlinker -e -Xlinker _start.

   The Emacs makefile used to use a Bourne Shell `for' loop to prefix
   each linker option with "-Xlinker", but 1) the for loop was hairier
   than one might hope because it had to work when there were no
   arguments to pass to the linker - the shell barfs on a loop like
   this:

       for arg in ; do echo -Xlinker "$arg"; done

   and 2) the whole compilation command containing this loop seems to
   exit with a non-zero status and halt the build under Ultrix.

   If I can't write a completely portable program to do this in C,
   I'm quitting and taking up gardening.  */

#include <stdio.h>

main (argc, argv)
     int argc;
     char **argv;
{
  char *progname;
  char *prefix;

  progname = argv[0];
  argc--, argv++;

  if (argc < 1)
    {
      fprintf (stderr, "Usage: %s PREFIX ARGS...\n\
Echo each ARG preceded by PREFIX and a space.\n", progname);
      exit (2);
    }

  prefix = argv[0];
  argc--, argv++;

  for (; argc > 0; argc--, argv++)
    printf ("%s %s%c", prefix, argv[0], (argc > 1) ? ' ' : '\n');

  exit (0);
}