On Mon, Aug 13, 2012 at 10:49:26AM -0400, Simon Urbanek wrote: > I suspect that your runtime/libc is defining fgetc as a macro which breaks > any code that uses it as an identifier. Ideally, your runtime should be fixed > to use a proper function, but you could probably work around it with > something like > > static char * fix_fgets(char *s, int n, FILE *stream) { return fgets(s, n, > stream); } > #undef fgets > static char * fgets(char *s, int n, FILE *stream) { return fix_fgets(s, n, > stream); } > > Cheers, > Simon
like this? :http://bpaste.net/show/40047/ if so, then i get this err msg: connections.c:385:15: error: static declaration of 'fgets' follows non-static declaration /usr/include/stdio.h:544:14: note: previous declaration of 'fgets' was here connections.c: In function 'Rconn_fgetc': connections.c:3192:11: error: expected identifier before '(' token connections.c:3194:15: error: expected identifier before '(' token and here is how it's declared in stdio.h on my system: /* Get a newline-terminated string of finite length from STREAM. This function is a possible cancellation point and therefore not marked with __THROW. */ extern char *fgets (char *__restrict __s, int __n, FILE *__restrict __stream) __wur; ______________________________________________ R-devel@r-project.org mailing list https://stat.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/r-devel