#!/usr/bin/perl -w
## Demonstration of event-driven interaction with a subprocess
## Event driven programming is a pain. This code is not that readable
## and is not a good place to start, especially since few people (including
## me) are familiar with bc's nuances.
use strict;
use IPC::Run qw( run );
die "usage: $0 <num>\n\nwhere <num> is a positive integer\n" unless @ARGV;
my $i = shift;
die "\$i must be > 0, not '$i'" unless $i =~ /^\d+$/ && $i > 0;
## bc instructions to initialize two variables and print one out
my $stdin_queue = "a = i = $i ; i\n";
## Note the FALSE on failure result (opposite of system()).
die $! unless run(
['bc'],
sub {
## Consume all input and return it. This is used instead of a plain
## scalar because run() would close bc's stdin the first time the
## scalar emptied.
my $r = $stdin_queue;
$stdin_queue = '';
return $r;
},
sub {
my $out = shift;
print "bc said: ", $out;
if ( $out =~ s/.*?(\d+)\n/$1/g ) {
## Grab the number from bc. Assume all numbers are delivered in
## single chunks and all numbers are significant.
if ( $out > $i ) {
## i! is always >i for i > 0
print "result = ", $out, "\n";
$stdin_queue = undef;
}
elsif ( $out == '1' ) {
## End of calculation loop, get bc to output the result.
$stdin_queue = "a\n";
}
else {
## get bc to calculate the next iteration and print it out.
$stdin_queue = "i = i - 1 ; a = a * i ; i\n";
}
}
},
);