You'll need to give me some more information about your setup, in order for me to help. Versions / OSes etc.
-- Andy Adler On Thu, 7 Oct 2004, Raymond Smith wrote: > Hello, > > I posted here a few months ago about trying to get inline octave to work. > I received good inital feedback, but I am still stuck. > > I know that i have inline installed as i can use inline c. I am using > inline-octave-0.21 > > i am pretty sure i have inline octave installed. My initial error when > running an inline octave perl script was: > I currently only know about the following languages: > C, Foo, c, foo > etc. > > To fix this i put the Octave.pm file in a location where i think makes > inline happy (ie. i don't see the above error message anymore). > > However when i run nmake test the first test hangs. > > I have put print STDERR everywhere in the Octave.pm file to see where my > problem is. > > I have pinpointed the problem (problem might not be the best word) to be > in sub interpret > I think this routine is called from the sub load. > > sub interpret { > ... > ... > > my $input; > my $marker_len= length( $marker )+1; > print STDERR "select can_read is $select\n"; > while ( 1 ) { > #print STDERR "inside while loop\n"; > for my $fh ( $select->can_read() ) { > print STDERR "inside for loop\n"; > if ($fh eq $Oerr) { > process_errors(); > } else { > sysread $fh, (my $line), 16386; > $input.= $line; > # delay if we're reading nothing, not sure why select > doesn't block > select undef, undef, undef, 0.5 unless $line; > } > } > last if substr( $input, -$marker_len, -1) eq $marker; > } > > ... > > what seems to be happening is that i enter this while loop and it never > leaves. Actually the print in the for loop never prints, so the > $select->can_read() might not be returning anything > > Any help would be greatly appreciated. > > Thanks, > paul > > > > > > >