Hi,
Well ... I think it's a C question ... and therefore ot.

On win32 I run the following Inline::C script:
use warnings; use Inline C => <<'EOC'; void foo() { printf("HELLO"); } EOC for(1..3) { foo(); print "\n"; }
This outputs exactly what I expect and want - namely:
C:\_32\pscrpt\inline>perl try.pl HELLO HELLO HELLO C:\_32\pscrpt\inline>
But on my linux (mandrake-9.1) box the same script produces (transcribed):
[rob@localhost inline]$ perl try.pl HELLOHELLOHELLO[rob@localhost inline]$
I'm wanting to see essentially the same as appears on the win32 box - that is, I want to see the same as would be output by print "HELLO\nHELLO\nHELLO\n";.
How do I get that output on linux by modifying only the foo (Inline::C) function ? Is it possible ?

Cheers,
Rob

In reply to [OT]: Flushing XS buffers portably by syphilis

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