Recently, Greg Ward <gward@cnri.reston.va.us> said: > BTW, is there anything like this on the Mac? On what other OSs does it > even make sense to talk about programs spawning other programs? (Surely > those GUI user interfaces have to do *something*...) Yes, but the interface is quite a bit more high-level, so it's pretty difficult to reconcile with the Unix and Windows "every argument is a string" paradigm. You start the process and pass along an AppleEvent (basically an RPC-call) that will be presented to the program upon startup. So on the mac there's a serious difference between (inventing the API interface here, cut down to make it understandable to non-macheads:-) spawn("netscape", ("Open", "file.html")) and spawn("netscape", ("OpenURL", "http://foo.com/file.html")) The mac interface is (of course:-) infinitely more powerful, allowing you to talk to running apps, adressing stuff in it as COM/OLE does, etc. but unfortunately the simple case of spawn("rm", "-rf", "/") is impossible to represent in a meaningful way. Add to that the fact that there's no stdin/stdout/stderr and there's little common ground. The one area of common ground is "run program X on files Y and Z and wait (or don't wait) for completion", so that is something that could maybe have a special method that could be implemented on all three mentioned platforms (and probably everything else as well). And even then it'll be surprising to Mac users that they have to _exit_ their editor (if you specify wait), not something people commonly do. -- Jack Jansen | ++++ stop the execution of Mumia Abu-Jamal ++++ Jack.Jansen@oratrix.com | ++++ if you agree copy these lines to your sig ++++ www.oratrix.nl/~jack | see http://www.xs4all.nl/~tank/spg-l/sigaction.htm
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