Are you sure windows and dos?
Because I've used c++ made on a computer made in 1990 I think. And I've
used it in windows and dos and all it needs is a \n.
Stephen Wolfe wrote:
>
> > > Just curious but I have a newbie question.
> > > What does the \r do?
> >
> > If I recall my line termination sequences correctly, both of these are
> > from the age of teletypes, and the \n would (and still does) move the
> > cursor down one line (but retain its position in character #'s) and the \r
> > will actually return the cursor to the begining of the line.
> >
> > One without the other is messy :)
>
> as i'm sure someone else will say, unix text files only need the \n
> (linefeed) at the end, whereas Windows (and DOS I think) use both the
> \r\n (carriage return followed by a linefeed). Having just a \n will
> work just fine on unix, but a Windows system, it would simply drop the
> cursor 1 row down. In fact, having thr \r in unix files screws them
> up..hence the need for the strip_string function that comes with oasis..
>
> siv
>
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