On Fri, Dec 03, 2004 at 04:44:01PM -0500, Richard Campbell wrote:
>>Provide a simple test case, that is compilable and linkable so that
>>we can investigate your claim.
>
>#include
>
>int main(int argc, char **argv)
>{
> setenv("TERM", "ansi", 1);
>/* ... blah, blah, ... */
>printf("TERM
>Provide a simple test case, that is compilable and linkable so that
>we can investigate your claim.
#include
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
setenv("TERM", "ansi", 1);
/* ... blah, blah, ... */
printf("TERM is: %s\n", getenv("TERM")); /* prints "ansi" as expected */
int i = fo
On Fri, Dec 03, 2004 at 04:21:40PM -0500, B. Scott Smith wrote:
>Hi all,
>
>Version: CYGWIN_NT-5.0 -- 1.5.12(0.116/4/2) -- i686 unknown unknown Cygwin
>
>I set the TERM environment variable in my application by calling
>setenv(). A subsequent call to getenv("TERM") yields the expected value.
>How
Hi all,
Version: CYGWIN_NT-5.0 -- 1.5.12(0.116/4/2) -- i686 unknown unknown Cygwin
I set the TERM environment variable in my application by calling
setenv(). A subsequent call to getenv("TERM") yields the expected value.
However, after performing a fork(), the call to getenv("TERM") returns
"cyg
On Fri, Dec 03, 2004 at 02:35:59PM -0500, B. Scott Smith wrote:
>Version: CYGWIN_NT-5.0 -- 1.5.12(0.116/4/2) -- i686 unknown unknown Cygwin
>
>I set the TERM environment variable in my application by calling
>setenv(). A subsequent call to getenv("TERM") yields the expected value.
>However, after
Hi all,
Version: CYGWIN_NT-5.0 -- 1.5.12(0.116/4/2) -- i686 unknown unknown Cygwin
I set the TERM environment variable in my application by calling
setenv(). A subsequent call to getenv("TERM") yields the expected value.
However, after performing a fork(), the call to getenv("TERM") returns
"cyg
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