It's not clear which of two things you are asking

The answer to the first question is simple and threefold:
  1. Run the command with back-ticks, assigning its STDOUT to a variable: as in, my $result = `commandline`;
  2. Use the system() function: as in, my $rc = system("commandline > result.log");
  3. Open the command as a pipe (if, say, you expect lots of output):
    # note vertical bar (pipe) at end of command open PH, "commandline|" or die "commandline: $!"; while (<PH>) { # ... do something with each line of output } close PH or die "commandline: $!";

The answer to the second question is too involved to cover adequately here, but has been covered in depth elsewhere, among which are this and this.

Update: Another option, as posited by Sniper, is of course to use Inline.pm, but once again, that's a whole 'nother ball of wax.

dmm

You can give a man a fish and feed him for a day ...
Or, you can
teach him to fish and feed him for a lifetime

In reply to Re: Running a C Program within Perl. by dmmiller2k
in thread Running a C Program within Perl. by basicdez

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