I imagine that the initialization step sets environment variables
or otherwise alters the environment for the next commands. However,
the environment only lasts for the current shell, and each
system
command opens a different shell. Therefore, any alterations to
the environment made by the first command will not be seen by
the second. You could try putting all the commands in a single
system:
system("/PATH/initialize_system; /PATH/skew.k ARG_FOR_FRAME_NUMBER;".
"/PATH/savegif.k FRAME_NUMBER; exit");
That way they all get executed by the same shell.
Don't forget to check the return code of
system. See its
documentation for the proper way of doing it.
On second thought, it looks as if the initialize_system command
starts a new shell, within which you execute the other commands,
right? If this is the case, the above will not work. You could
try doing the following if initialize_system accepts commands from
stdin:
system('echo "/PATH/skew.k ARG_FOR_FRAME_NUMBER;/PATH/savegif.k"|'.
'/PATH/initialize_system');
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