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| Date: | Thu, 19 Aug 1999 11:26:47 +0300 (IDT) |
| From: | Eli Zaretskii <eliz AT is DOT elta DOT co DOT il> |
| X-Sender: | eliz AT is |
| To: | Davin McCall <DavMac AT iname DOT com>, Goh Yong Kwang <ykgoh AT email DOT com> |
| cc: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
| Subject: | Re: What's the difference between system, spawn and exec? |
| In-Reply-To: | <37bad5a7.54874091@newsserver.cc.monash.edu.au> |
| Message-ID: | <Pine.SUN.3.91.990819112339.9461C-100000@is> |
| MIME-Version: | 1.0 |
| Reply-To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
| X-Mailing-List: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
| X-Unsubscribes-To: | listserv AT delorie DOT com |
On Wed, 18 Aug 1999, Davin McCall wrote: > system() uses the shell (command processor) to process the command you > give it. So, you can use internal shell commands. This is functionally correct, but not 100% accurate in the case of DJGPP. The DJGPP version of `system' doesn't call the command processor unless it absolutely has to. Usually, it emulates COMMAND.COM instead of calling it. Thus, you can have long command lines, redirection to special files like /dev/null, and other niceties. See the description of `system' in the library docs, for more details.
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