(assume Pawel's drunk, plz)

You were looking for a way to determine the values of some
constants that I assume are hard to derive. Your code piece
used compiled code to print out the value of an unknown
constant. Without going deep into the nature of the problem,
I've proposed using preprocessor for the same task.
It would probably be easier to do so, since all you have
to do is to include the header(s), and list out the constants
you need finding out values for, and preprocessed output
will list the constant values, as it will expand all the
tokens...

Thanks,
  Pawel.

On Thu, Jun 11, 2009 at 7:03 PM, Vincent R.<foru...@smartmobili.com> wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Jun 2009 17:15:40 +0900, Pawel Veselov <pawel.vese...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>> I would do that:
>>
>> [...@e03077]/tmp$ cat > /tmp/1.c
>> #include <ctype.h>
>> _CTYPE_Q
>> [...@e03077]/tmp$ gcc -E /tmp/1.c |tail
>> {snip}
>> 0x00200000L
>> [...@e03077]/tmp$
>>
>
> Am I missing something ? what is 1.c ?
> why are you including ctype.h ?
> Are you answering to the problem of finding some CEVT_XXXX definitions ?
>
>
>



-- 
With best of best regards
Pawel S. Veselov

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