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Saturday 5 July 2014

C – Command line arguments

Command line arguments in C:

      main() function of a C program accepts arguments from command line or from other shell scripts by following commands. They are,
  • argc
  • argv[]
where,
argc      - Number of arguments in the command line including program name
argv[]   – This is carrying all the arguments
  • In real time application, it will happen to pass arguments to the main program itself.  These arguments are passed to the main () function while executing binary file from command line.
  • For example, when we compile a program (test.c), we get executable file in the name “test”.
  • Now, we run the executable “test” along with 4 arguments in command line like below.
./test this is a program
Where,
argc             =       5
argv[0]         =       “test”
argv[1]         =       “this”
argv[2]         =       “is”
argv[3]         =       “a”
argv[4]         =       “program”
argv[5]         =       NULL

Example program for argc() and argv() functions in C:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])   //  command line arguments
{
if(argc!=5) 
{
   printf("Arguments passed through command line " \
          "not equal to 5");
   return 1;
}

   printf("\n Program name  : %s \n", argv[0]);
   printf("1st arg  : %s \n", argv[1]);
   printf("2nd arg  : %s \n", argv[2]);
   printf("3rd arg  : %s \n", argv[3]);
   printf("4th arg  : %s \n", argv[4]);
   printf("5th arg  : %s \n", argv[5]);

return 0;
}

 Output:


Program name : test
1st arg : this
2nd arg : is
3rd arg : a
4th arg : program
5th arg : (null)

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