Iñaki Baz Castillo wrote:
El Miércoles, 26 de Noviembre de 2008, Alex Balashov escribió:
Iñaki Baz Castillo wrote:
El Miércoles, 26 de Noviembre de 2008, Alex Balashov escribió:
You can parse it yourself using textops from $hdr(CSeq).
Not needed at all, just read $rm variable (works for requests and responses).
I didn't say it was needed, just that it could be done. ;) $rm is definitely best.
I agree with you, parsing $hdr(CSeq) is cooler XD
In about the same measure that
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h>
int main(void) { FILE *fp = fopen("/dev/stdout", "w");
fprintf(fp, "Hello World!\n"); fclose(fp);
return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
is cooler than
10 PRINT "HELLO WORLD" 20 END
:)
On Wednesday 26 November 2008, Alex Balashov wrote:
You can parse it yourself using textops from $hdr(CSeq).
Not needed at all, just read $rm variable (works for requests and responses).
I didn't say it was needed, just that it could be done. ;) $rm is definitely best.
I agree with you, parsing $hdr(CSeq) is cooler XD
In about the same measure that
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h>
int main(void) { FILE *fp = fopen("/dev/stdout", "w");
fprintf(fp, "Hello World!\n"); fclose(fp);
return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
is cooler than
10 PRINT "HELLO WORLD" 20 END
Hi Alex,
this is still way to old school:
import java.lang.System.out;
public class Hello { public static void main (String argv[]) { out.println("Hello World!"); } }
SCNR ;-)
Cheers,
Henning