.NH BASICS .NH 2 Program Arguments .PP When a C program is run as a command, the arguments on the command line are made available to the function .UL main as an argument count .UL argc and an array .UL argv of pointers to character strings that contain the arguments. By convention, .UL argv[0] is the command name itself, so .UL argc is always greater than 0. .PP The following program illustrates the mechanism: it simply echoes its arguments back to the terminal. (This is essentially the .UL echo command.) .P1 main(argc, argv) /* echo arguments */ int argc; char *argv[]; { int i; for (i = 1; i < argc; i++) printf("%s%c", argv[i], (i : if .UL prog uses .UL putchar , .P1 prog >outfile .P2 writes the standard output on .UL outfile instead of the terminal. .UL outfile is created if it doesn't exist; if it already exists, its previous contents are overwritten. And a pipe can be used: .P1 prog | otherprog .P2 puts the standard output of .UL prog into the standard input of .UL otherprog. .PP The function .UL printf , which formats output in various ways, uses the same mechanism as .UL putchar does, so calls to .UL printf and .UL putchar may be intermixed in any order; the output will appear in the order of the calls. .PP Similarly, the function .UL scanf provides for formatted input conversion; it will read the standard input and break it up into strings, numbers, etc., as desired. .UL scanf uses the same mechanism as .UL getchar , so calls to them may also be intermixed. .PP Many programs read only one input and write one output; for such programs I/O with .UL getchar , .UL putchar , .UL scanf , and .UL printf may be entirely adequate, and it is almost always enough to get started. This is particularly true if the .UC UNIX pipe facility is used to connect the output of one program to the input of the next. For example, the following program strips out all ascii control characters from its input (except for newline and tab). .P1 #include main() /* ccstrip: strip non-graphic characters */ { int c; while ((c = getchar()) != EOF) if ((c >= ' ' && c < 0177) || c == '\t' || c == '\n') putchar(c); exit(0); } .P2 The line .P1 #include .P2 should appear at the beginning of each source file. It causes the C compiler to read a file .IT /usr/include/stdio.h ) ( of standard routines and symbols that includes the definition of .UL EOF . .PP If it is necessary to treat multiple files, you can use .UL cat to collect the files for you: .P1 cat file1 file2 ... | ccstrip >output .P2 and thus avoid learning how to access files from a program. By the way, the call to .UL exit at the end is not necessary to make the program work properly, but it assures that any caller of the program will see a normal termination status (conventionally 0) from the program when it completes. Section 6 discusses status returns in more detail.