Flashnux

GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

Unix

Unix v7

intro(3)


INTRO

INTRO

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
FILES
SEE ALSO
DIAGNOSTICS
ASSEMBLER

NAME

intro − introduction to library functions

SYNOPSIS

#include <stdio.h>

#include <math.h>

DESCRIPTION

This section describes functions that may be found in various libraries, other than those functions that directly invoke UNIX system primitives, which are described in section 2. Functions are divided into various libraries distinguished by the section number at the top of the page:

(3)

These functions, together with those of section 2 and those marked (3S), constitute library libc, which is automatically loaded by the C compiler cc(1) and the Fortran compiler f77(1). The link editor ld(1) searches this library under the ’−lc’ option. Declarations for some of these functions may be obtained from include files indicated on the appropriate pages.

(3M)

These functions constitute the math library, libm. They are automatically loaded as needed by the Fortran compiler f77(1). The link editor searches this library under the ’−lm’ option. Declarations for these functions may be obtained from the include file <math.h>.

(3S)

These functions constitute the ’standard I/O package’, see stdio(3). These functions are in the library libc already mentioned. Declarations for these functions may be obtained from the include file <stdio.h>.

(3X)

Various specialized libraries have not been given distinctive captions. The files in which these libraries are found are named on the appropriate pages.

FILES

/lib/libc.a
/lib/libm.a, /usr/lib/libm.a (one or the other)

SEE ALSO

stdio(3), nm(1), ld(1), cc(1), f77(1), intro(2)

DIAGNOSTICS

Functions in the math library (3M) may return conventional values when the function is undefined for the given arguments or when the value is not representable. In these cases the external variable errno (see intro(2)) is set to the value EDOM or ERANGE. The values of EDOM and ERANGE are defined in the include file <math.h>.

ASSEMBLER

In assembly language these functions may be accessed by simulating the C calling sequence. For example, ecvt(3) might be called this way:

setd

mov

$sign,−(sp)

mov

$decpt,−(sp)

mov

ndigit,−(sp)

movf

value,−(sp)

jsr

pc,_ecvt

add

$14.,sp



intro(3)