Reputation: 335
new to Linux and C so probably a simple task..but
As per the title,
How, via the command line, do you redirect 2 distinct files as input, so that when the program is done with the first, it will move on to the second?
./a.out < in1.txt .......
Upvotes: 1
Views: 2487
Reputation: 241771
Probably what you are looking for is
cat in1.txt in2.txt ... | ./a.out
which will use cat
to concatenate the named files to stdout, and the | (pipe) operator to take the stdout from the left and feed it into the stdin on the right.
./a.out > in1.txt
redirects stdout, not stdin. If you want to redirect stdin, use
./a.out < in1.txt
But you can only specify one file.
With bash, you can also redirect from the output of a command:
./a.out < <(cat in1.txt in2.txt)
Upvotes: 4