Now, cd into that directory, and do the following:
UNIX> tar xpfv ~jplank/cs302/tchelpers.tar q qprocess.c qpscript.sh helpers.h UNIX> gcc -I/home/plank/include -o qprocess qprocess.c /home/plank/lib/LINUX-X86_64/libfdr.a -lm UNIX>When you first download a program from Topcoder, type q. For example, suppose I have just downloaded the NoEights program (SRM 355, D2, 550). I type q, and it will say:
UNIX> q NoEights.cpp UNIX> qWhen I do a long listing, I see that it has created some new files:
UNIX> ls -l -r-------- 1 plank loci 1049 2011-09-02 11:18 backup-NoEights.cpp -rw-r--r-- 1 plank loci 865 2011-09-02 11:18 desc-NoEights.cpp.html -rwxrwxrwx 1 plank loci 938 2011-09-02 11:11 helpers.h -rw-r--r-- 1 plank loci 937 2011-09-02 11:18 junk-desc-backup.txt -rw-r--r-- 1 plank loci 870 2011-09-02 11:18 junk.html -rw-r--r-- 1 plank loci 568 2011-09-02 11:18 main.cpp -rw-r--r-- 1 plank loci 732 2011-09-02 11:18 NoEights.cpp -rwxr-xr-x 1 plank loci 69 2011-09-02 11:10 q -rwxr-xr-x 1 plank loci 23969 2011-09-02 11:14 qprocess -rwxrwxrwx 1 plank loci 6040 2011-09-02 11:12 qprocess.c -rwxrwxrwx 1 plank loci 526 2010-09-26 13:34 qpscript.sh UNIX>Ignore the junk files. The important files are:
If you call q on a file that you have edited already (let's say you've already worked on the topcoder problem, and you re-download it), it won't work. However, if you have the backup available, what you can do is: Move your intermediate version to another file, copy the backup to its original filename, chmod it to 0644, then call q again. It will complain that it can't write the backup, but that's not a problem. You have your main.cpp, and that's the important thing. Move your intermediate version back and you're ready to go.